da Vinci Classic (1984-1990) The da Vinci, now known as the da Vinci Classic, was launched in 1984 and manufactured until 1990. At the time of its introduction, it was the only
film-to-tape or
tape-to-tape color correction system available that offered the capability to correct secondary colors by isolating them. The analog
grading system became the most popular color corrector for telecines like the
Fernseh FL 60 and
Rank Cintel Mark 3. TLC was an edit controller for telecines,
vision mixers, and
video tape recorders. It provided accurate
2:3 editing when transferring a
24 frames per second film into a 30 frames per second video environment. TLC 1 was released by Time Logic in early 1994 and TLC 2 was released by da Vinci later that year.
888 da Vinci User Interface (1995) In 1995, the 888 da Vinci User Interface (DUI) was introduced. It had similar color processing to the 888 but had a new
Windows-style
user interface, an internal TLC controller, and
EDWIN. The telecine interface card controlled the telecine's internal color corrector. The 888 DUI came in two configurations: the first used a
SGI Indy workstation and the second used
SGI O2. With an improved color processing quality and performance, it could support
high-definition,
standard-definition, and
2K formats. It operated with a
4:2:2,
4:4:4, or 8:4:4 input. da Vinci 2K also included features such as
PowerTiers, Defocus (using
defocus aberration); and Colorist Toolbox. In 2001, PowerGrades, color presets, and the Gallery, an integrated reference store, were available as additions. It also allowed for real-time filesharing.
Seabiscuit and
Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace were both graded on the 2K. In 2001, the 2K won the
Philo T. Farnsworth Award at the
Primetime Engineering Emmy Awards. The 2K Plus was introduced in 2002. Upgrades included four PowerVectors, Defocus Plus, Colorist Plus, and redesigned primaries, secondaries, and keys. In 2006, ColorTrace was offered for 2K Plus to track color grades when the
edit decision list (EDL) is revised.
Nucleas (2003) Nucleas was launched in 2003, providing server-to-server software interface to existing 2k Plus systems to work from data disks and
storage networks.
HIPPI and HSDL (High Speed Data Link, which transferred 2K and higher resolution images over HD-SDI links) interfaces and data
waveforms were also available.
Resolve (2004) In 2004, da Vinci released
Resolve, a software-based,
resolution-independent color grading system that used multiple
parallel processing engines within normal PC computer infrastructure for real-time 2K resolution color grading. This system was the first to implement
InfiniBand topology. In 2007, da Vinci released the Resolve R-3D which was focused on nonlinear grading in 3D. Some of the early films graded on the R-3RD include
Quantum of Solace,
U2 3D, and
Meet the Robinsons. In 2008, Impresario, a new control panel for Resolve, was launched at
NAB 2008 and demonstrated at NAB 2009. Resolve v6.2, released in 2009, allowed syncing two Resolve systems for shared work; when any changes are made on one, they immediately appeared on the other.
Splice (2004) Like the da Vinci Nucleas, Splice was a server-to-server system that enabled 2K systems to work nonlinearly. It was promoted for use with
SANs and as a life-extender for the 2K and 2K Plus. ==See also==