
Sony Pictures Imageworks Announces
OpenColorIO
August 5, 2010
Source: Sony Picture Imageworks
Latest Software
To Be Released Through Its Open Source Program Provides Framework
for Sharing of Color Transformations Across Computer Graphics
Workflows
Sony Pictures Imageworks announced
the release of OpenColorIO (OCIO), its sixth production-proven
open source software to be introduced since launching its
open source initiative in July 2009.
The new release can be found online at http://opensource.imageworks.com.
Colorspace -- the numerical description of color used in computer
graphics production and display -- is one of the trickiest
and most challenging aspects of digital motion-picture production.
This is particularly true of visual effects and animation,
where images typically flow through multiple software applications,
and even production houses, each often leveraging unique color
processes.
In the absence of conventions for sharing color transformation
processes, virtually every production team must re-invent
a color workflow, for every application - which tends to be
really hard to get right.
OpenColorIO (OCIO) enables color transforms and image display
to be handled in a consistent manner across multiple graphics
applications. Unlike existing color management solutions,
OCIO is geared towards motion-picture post-production, with
an emphasis on visual effects and animation color pipelines.
OpenColorIO has been used at Sony Pictures Imageworks since
2003 to address the challenges of working with multiple commercial
image-processing applications that have different approaches
to color management. By providing a unified color environment,
OpenColorIO greatly simplifies the task of creating and validating
multiple-application color workflows.
"Dealing with color space issues is something every facility
faces on every show--and it's not getting any simpler,"
notes Rob Bredow, Chief Technology Officer at Sony Pictures
Imageworks and a veteran visual effects supervisor. "OpenColorIO
is our contribution to help provide a framework on which people
can easily share colorspace transformations and apply it to
any workflow consistently."
Lead developer Jeremy Selan explains, "Optimistically,
we would hope that as the motion picture industry transitions
from film to a purely digital workflow, color management processes
would become simpler and more rigorously defined.
" Unfortunately, in practice we've seen the opposite
-- that a fully digital workflow often opens the door to confusion
and ambiguity creeping into the color processes. Our hope
is to offer OpenColorIO as a step in the right direction.
For smaller facilities, OpenColorIO allows artists to work
in a properly color-managed process with minimal setup effort.
And, for larger facilities the extensive customization allows
OCIO-compatible tools to be used off-the-shelf -- matching
existing facility color practice."
In 2009, Imageworks released five open source projects including
OSL, a programmable shading language for rendering, Field3d,
a voxel data storage library, Maya Reticule, a Maya Plug-in
for camera masking, Scala Migration, a database migration
tool, and Pystring, a python-like string handling in C++.
"We've been very pleased by the response of the industry
and the open source community to our projects," says
Rob Bredow. "We're excited to share these tools with
a wider audience and value the collaborative development."
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