Sometimes the only person looking at the shot is the person behind the camera. Sometimes there may be multiple people but they don’t all want to see the same thing. If it’s just one person, he or she can view the shot on the adjustable LCD screen or set the SDI output to clone the display of the LCD to another monitor or viewfinder. All of the heads-up data such as frame rate and lens settings can be individually switched on/off and assist functions such as focus, framing and exposure aids can be customized and switched on/off at will. If shooting in V-Log, the image can be displayed with or without a Rec709 monitoring correction, but the exposure tools will always display the Log levels to allow for quick comparisons. If others need to see the image as well the EVA1 offers great flexibility. There are two video outputs, an HDMI and an SDI, and both are capable of 4K and always active even when recording. There are several combinations of signal possible: one output can be in 4K while the other is HD, and one could be a clean image with no display information while the other has just the info you choose to show, which can be different than what is displayed or not on the camera’s LCD. If shooting in V-Log, the monitoring Rec709 correction can be selected individually for any or all of the three outputs. An example of how this flexibility can be used would be an EVA1 recording in V-Log for post color grading; the camera LCD displaying the 709 monitoring correction with a waveform monitor exposure tool in the corner of the frame showing the V-Log levels for comparison and the on screen display data showing lens and color temperature info; the SDI output in 4K 10-bit 422 in V-Log with no data displayed going to a video recorder, and the HDMI output sending HD video with the monitoring correction applied and the clip name and timecode displayed feeding a video transmitter for a script supervisor and director to view. That’s just one scenario but there are lots of possibilities and for other cameras this level of flexibility would require a small cart of boxes and converters.