Tag Archives: Colorist Sam Daley

Senior Colorist Sam Daley Joins Picture Shop New York

Picture Shop has added senior colorist Sam Daley to its roster. Daley has nearly 25 years of experience working on series such as HBO’s Succession and Amazon’s Dead Ringers and features including The Florida Project, Sorry to Bother You, A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood and Barbarian. He will be based at Picture Shop in New York City but working on projects globally.

Daley has been nominated for Hollywood Professional Association (HPA) Awards for Outstanding Color Grading in Documentary/Nonfiction for Descendant (2023) and for Outstanding Color Grading in Television for Show Me a Hero. His list of credits includes the feature films Earth Mama, Charm City Kings, Sanctuary, Swallow and Beirut, among others.

Recent episodic credits include Gossip Girl, I’m a Virgo, Station Eleven, Scenes From a Marriage, Harlan Coben’s Shelter and I Know This Much Is True. Daley is an associate member of The American Society of Cinematographers (ASC). Prior to joining Picture Shop, he was at Light Iron, Company 3, Goldcrest Post, Technicolor PostWorks and others.

“I’m excited to be at a company with the scope and global footprint of Picture Shop,” says Daley. “I can continue to collaborate with the filmmakers I work with as they take their talents throughout the continent and across the pond.”

In addition to the New York facility, Picture Shop’s North American locations include Los Angeles, Toronto and Vancouver. The company has UK facilities in London, Manchester, Bristol, Wales and at Pinewood Studios.

 

 

Colorist Chat: Sam Daley Talks Fairyland and Earth Mama 

Light Iron colorist Sam Daley, who works on both features and episodics, joined the company’s New York facility in 2021. His television credits include the series Life & Beth, Succession and The Sinner, and his feature credits include Scenes From a Marriage, The Florida Project and A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood.

Sam Daley

Sam Daley

This year Daley worked on the indie films Fairyland and Earth Mama, both of which were shown at Sundance. The films are set in California’s Bay Area and are period pieces of sorts. Earth Mama takes place in the early 2000s and follows a young, pregnant mother who’s trying to win back custody of her children after they’ve been put in foster care.

Fairyland is a coming-of-age tale about a young girl who moves to San Francisco with her father after her mom passes away. We watch her grow up throughout the 1970s and ’80s and see their relationship evolve while he lives as an openly gay man.

Let’s find out more about his work on these films…

How early did you get involved on these films, and how did that help? 
I started working on Earth Mama, which was written and directed by Savanah Leaf, during preproduction and was involved in all the camera tests. I work with DP Jody Lee Lipes quite often, so he and I have developed a routine for how we start projects. He likes a very specific style of LUT, and I will modify it for whatever camera he’s using. I worked with the Kodak lab that was doing the film processing and dailies to make sure whatever Jody shot looked the way he intended.

Earth Mama

I’ve also worked with Fairyland DP Greta Zozula on a few shorts before, but this was the first feature we’d done together. I was brought in at the beginning of production and had a conversation with the director during the first week to make sure we were on the same page. This film was written and directed by Andrew Durham.

While I’ve worked with both Greta and Jody before, there was something particularly exciting about these films because they’re both feature directorial debuts. Both directors also have personal ties to the films, which makes it that much cooler.

What direction were you given on the film(s)? Did you get a look book? ? 
Savanah and Andrew are both photographers, so that was helpful in understanding what they were envisioning.

For Earth Mama, Savanah took some mood pictures on film early on. She had them processed and scanned and then shared the photos with Jody. The images looked textured and raw, which Jody loved, so that became the model for how we wanted the story to look.

Fairyland

For Fairyland, Andrew provided several photo references, then Greta and I decided how best to translate Andrew’s vision into the color grade.

How do you prefer getting this info on your projects, generally?
I don’t have a preference. However the filmmaker wants to communicate their vision is fine with me. Sometimes I’ll receive photography lookbooks or frame grabs from movies, but there have also been instances when I’ve only received text descriptions.

How do you prefer to work with the DP/director? How often do you show them your work? 
I have a very specific process, but I’m able to adapt it to the client’s needs. I do a continuity pass on the movie before anyone sits in the room with me to make sure all the exposures and color temperatures match. After my continuity pass, I create different looks based on the references and my conversations with the filmmakers. Once this is done, then we’ll sit down together and go through different looks. I get their feedback on what they like best and then make changes based on their notes. Then we’ll go scene by scene and fine-tune before our final watch down.

Sam Daley

Fairyland

Can you give an example of a note you got about the color? 
Andrew Durham was very specific about making sure the tones in Fairyland remained cool. The film takes place in California, which people tend to associate with warm colors, but he was clear that we should avoid “warming up” the shots, whether for nostalgia purposes or for representing the daylight in San Francisco.

What were some challenging scenes? 
In Fairyland, the film starts in 16mm and then transitions to ARRI Alexa footage. We had a lot of conversations on how we were going to transition between the two formats without it feeling like too abrupt of a change. We were challenged with creating a seamless transition from 16mm to Alexa that felt organic and signaled a time jump in the film, but not necessarily a format change.

What system did you use, and is there a tool in the system you found yourself using a lot? 
I used DaVinci Resolve 17. My “secret weapon” is a dehaze feature that removes haze from scenes where there’s too much fog or the lens is getting flared. I’ve found a way to incorporate it into my grade using a subtle amount to make images pop.

Light Iron New York Adds Colorist Sam Daley

Light Iron, the post services division of Panavision, has added colorist Sam Daley to its roster. Daley joins the team as a senior colorist and will be based in the company’s New York facility working on both feature and episodic projects.

Daley brings more than 20 years of experience in the New York post community, joining Light Iron from Company 3. After getting a start in commercial dailies at DuArt, Daley developed his skills at Tape House and PostWorks before joining Technicolor. There, he graded dailies on some of the biggest New York productions at the time. Encouraged by the cinematographers with whom he partnered as a dailies colorist, he transitioned into final color.

His television credits include the series Smash, Girls, The Deuce, The Sinner and Succession and the miniseries I Know This Much Is True and Show Me a Hero, the latter of which earned him an HPA Award nomination in 2016. His feature credits include The Florida Project, Sorry to Bother You and A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood.

“The Light Iron team is incredibly collaborative and forward-thinking, and that’s how I work,” Daley said. “Helping directors and cinematographers cross the finish line is a thrill for me. All the labor and the love they spend comes to fruition on the screen in front of us. It’s the most rewarding part of my craft.

“Working in the Panavision family is a big bonus for me,” Daley continues. “My first job in the industry was in the camera-rental department as a work-study in film school. That experience allowed me to better communicate with cinematographers when I worked at laboratories earlier in my career. Now the collaboration can begin at camera prep!”

Daley and fellow senior colorist Sean Dunckley will work in New York, with the ability to work remotely with filmmakers worldwide. The company’s bicoastal roster of final colorists also includes Ian Vertovec, Jeremy Sawyer, Scott Klein, Corinne Bogdanowicz, Nick Hasson, Ethan Schwartz and Katie Jordan.

In addition to Light Iron’s New York and Los Angeles facilities, the company has locations in Atlanta, Albuquerque, Chicago, New Orleans, Toronto and Vancouver offering dailies services and remote sessions. Light Iron’s remote capabilities — including solutions for dailies, offline editorial rentals and color and finishing — allow filmmakers working anywhere in the world to partner with the company.

According to Light Iron co-managing director Seth Hallen, “Light Iron’s history of pioneering file-based workflows laid the foundation early on for our remote capabilities. Over the past 12 months, as the industry has navigated through the pandemic, our remote solutions for dailies, editorial and finishing have proven to be truly game-changing. Rather than having to centralize at one particular location, our clients can choose to work at multiple Light Iron offices — and from their own offices and homes — concurrently. Wherever filmmakers are working, they can collaborate with the artists at any of our facilities.”