

This is especially interesting to me, a camera operator who always accidentally bumps into his monitor on a busy set. A neat feature of the LUT6S is the touch screen can be turned on or off via a button on the top left. Touch Screen PanelĪll of the setting on the monitor are accessible through either the Menu dial on the top of the monitor or by double tapping the touch screen. It also has a 12v DC input for powering the monitor through an adapter or v-mount on your rig, and a 6v output to power your DSLR or mirrorless camera (dummy battery adapter required). The Feelworld LUT6S can accept and passthrough a video signal of up to 4K 30P through its HDMI and SDI inputs. When you’re filming in log, the last thing you want to do is monitor uncorrected footage – you’ll end up with funky exposures, off white balance settings, and noise you didn’t even realize was there. If you didn’t guess it from the name, the Feelworld LUT6S comes pre-loaded with standard LUTs for Sony, Canon, and Panasonic and it features an SD card slot for loading in custom, user generated LUTs. This should fit in very nicely as an on camera monitor for solo shooters who are on the move. Often 5” monitors are just a little too small, and 7” monitors can really get in the way if you’re moving quickly and portability is key. At 6”s, it is just the right size to assist with focusing and framing without dominating the entire top of your rig. The size of this monitor isn’t something we see very often. At 2600nits these displays are bright enough to be viewable in direct sunlight without the use of a sunhood (but using one helps a lot with glare). The most enticing and attractive feature we see coming out of this company is the fantastic high-brightness capabilities.

We’ve talked about Feelworld’s monitors several times in the past, and even recently covered their LUT7S monitor, which as the names suggests is the 7” bigger brother to this 6” LUT6S. Just a few years ago it was impossible to find a field monitor that offered the tools, quality, clarity, and brightness that Feelworld promises.īut does the Feelworld LUT6S live up to the specs or would this $389 ultra-bright monitor crumble under the stresses of a production environment? Fenchel & Janisch walks us through the positives and negatives of what sounds like the on-camera display we’ve all been waiting for!
#LUT6S FEELWORLD PROFESSIONAL#
With various models loaded with professional features, in sizes ranging from 4.5 – 21.5”s, Feelworld is really taking the low-mid tier price range for production displays by storm.

Feelworld, a Shenzhen-based company who’s name I assume is derived from the fact that they produce touch screen monitors, has had a lot of interesting and enticing offerings hitting the display market lately.
