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About OpenEXR

 

Show Me ...

The following pictures show the same OpenEXR image; yet the amount of detail you can see when comparing the three is substantially different. R2-D2 stands out clearly, but hidden in the top right corner shadows is Darth Vader. Using the Viewer, you can adjust the amount of exposure on the fly to see more details emerge, as the following images show.
 
Original OpenEXR Image

... with original Exposure setting of zero (0):
Adjust 3 Stops Brighter

... details emerge from the shadows.
Adjust 5 Stops Brighter

... and even more details emerge from the shadows.
(click for larger image) (click for larger image) (click for larger image)

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History

ILM developed the OpenEXR format in response to the demand for higher color fidelity in the visual effects industry. When the project began in 2000, ILM evaluated existing file formats, but rejected them for various reasons:

  • 8- and 10-bit formats lack the dynamic range necessary to store high-contrast images captured from HDR devices.
  • 16-bit integer-based formats typically represent color component values from 0 ("black") to 1 ("white"), but don't account for over-range values (e.g., a chrome highlight) that can be captured by film negative or other HDR devices. For images intended only for display or print reproduction, clamping at "white" may be sufficient; but for image processing in a visual effects house, highlights often need to be preserved in the image data. Preserving over-range values in the source image allows an artist to change the apparent exposure of the image with minimal loss of data, for example.
  • Conversely, 32-bit floating-point TIFF is often overkill for visual effects work. 32-bit FP TIFF provides more than sufficient precision and dynamic range for VFX images, but it comes at the cost of storage, both on disk and in memory. When creating background plates for VFX work, film is usually scanned in at 2k pixels wide or more, and 24p HD images are 1920x1080, so background plates are already quite large relative to "typical" digital images.

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Features

ILM decided to develop a new HDR file format with 16-bit floating-point color component values. Since the IEEE-754 floating-point specification does not define a 16-bit format, ILM created the "half" format. Half values have 1 sign bit, 5 exponent bits, and 10 mantissa bits. For linear images, this format provides 1024 (210) values per color component per f-stop, and 30 f-stops (25 - 2), with an additional 10 f-stops with reduced precision at the low end (denormals).

The half format supports denormalized numbers, positive and negative infinities, and NaNs. It is identical to the half data type in NVIDIA's Cg graphics language, allowing a developer to process values from an OpenEXR image directly on current NVIDIA GPUs such as the GeForce FX family.

In addition to the half data type, OpenEXR supports 32-bit unsigned integer and 32-bit floating-point data types. OpenEXR images can have an arbitrary number of channels, each with a different data type.

The current release of OpenEXR supports several lossless compression methods, some of which can achieve compression ratios of about 2:1 for images with film grain. OpenEXR is extensible, so developers can easily add new compression methods (lossless or lossy).

OpenEXR images can be annotated with an arbitrary number of attributes, e.g., with color balance information from a camera.

OpenEXR images are able to support stereoscopic workflows; version 1.7.0 has support for multiple views resident in the image files. Please see the documentation pages for further detail.

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