Archive for the 'Shooting' Category

“House” Season finale shot on Canon 5D

This season’s last episode of House has been shot on HDSLR: with a Canon 5D Mk II and Canon lenses (including a 50mm f/1.0 – talk about shallow depth of field!)

The feedback of Vincent Laforet was very positive:

1. The lens sharpness was phenomenal. Why? The lighting. Sure we all caught some glimpses of people/faces falling out of focus at times – something all 5D MKII and HDDSLR operators are well acquainted with… I’m sure this could be remedied with many of the newer 3rd party lens options out there today. I am told this episode was shot with Canon EF Lenses – including the 24~70mm 2.8 and 70~200mm 2.8 – lenses that are particularly difficult to set focus marks with, as they were never really intended to be used as cinema lenses.
2. The image quality was phenomenal. No noise. No artifacting whatsoever. No blocking up of shadows. Why? In my opinion: The lighting.
3. The lighting throughout was phenomenal. Basically – it was lit in a very similar way if not identical way to the high standard that House has been filmed in the past. DP Gale Tatersall understood something that I have formulated over the past 2 years with the Canon 5D MKII: While the camera does produce incredible results in low light – you still need to light for it carefully – and often, you’ll end up lighting it in very similar ways to how you would light for just about any camera out there. The difference is that you may need 1-2 stops less overall in lighting at times.

So if you thought an HDSLR didn’t need proper lighting, think again.

Better audio with Beachtek 5DA

via productionapprentice.com:

The Beachtek DXA-5DA offers a whole bunch of features you’re used to having on your video camera, but don’t have on your HDSLR, mainly the aforementioned xlr inputs and headphone jack, along with VU meters, volume knobs, and most importantly Camera Auto Gain Disabler.

The Auto Gain Control in the Canon HDSLR cameras tries to pick up as much sound as possible. This means that during silent periods, the microphone gain is cranked up to amplify as much as possible any sound there might be. As a result, you get amplified noise: ‘hissing’. That wouldn’t be as much of a problem if you could switch it off in the camera, but that you can’t. Hence the AGC disabling feature (by inserting an inaudible 20KHz tone in the left channel). Beachtek competitor JuicedLink says adding tones is evil, but most reviews are positive about it.

The BeachTek 5DA costs $330 (or 260€) at B&H!

Real-World Shooting With the Canon 7D

PF Bentley has written an article on using HDSLR, the Canon 7D in this case, for photojournalism.

He mentions three accessories as indispensable:

  • a viewfinder like the Zacuto Z-Finder
  • enhanced audio through Beachtek (internal recording) or Zoom (external recording)
  • a variable neutral density filter (e.g. Singh-Ray) which allows you to film in broad daylight with wide aperture, which gives esthetic depth-of-field effects.

His conclusion:

In the end, the Canon 5D and 7D are incredible cameras and I doubt if I could ever use a smaller sensor video-type camera again, but I’d love to have a body that uses the 5D full-frame chip with built-in XLR connections, audio meters and a viewfinder that accepts SLR lenses and attaches a LANC cable to it. Whoever puts the 5D-type chip into that body will definitely corner the market for years to come.

Living The Sacred Teachings of Aloha from PF BENTLEY on Vimeo.

Camera shootout at very high ISO

Zacuto is running a 3 episode series on HDSLR cameras: the Canon 5D, 7D, 1D, the Nikon D3s, Panasonic GH1. The last episode checks out low light / high ISO scenes. They even test Hyper-ISO in the “BIC lighter scene”: 640, 1250, 2500, 5000, 10000, 25650, 51200 and 102.000 ISO!!

It is clear that low light (under 1 foot-candle) conditions is where HDSLR cameras shine. They certainly say a lot of positive things about the Nikon D3s, that can film at the unreal 102.000 ISO.

Steadicam Merlin for smooth shots

Because of the limited weight of modern HDSLR cameras, they can be hard to hold still without a tripod or fixed support of some kind. To the rescue comes a very affordable ($850) hand-held Steadicam Merlin solution, designed by Garrett Brown, who created the original Steadicam.

Merlin’s design significantly reduces fatigue. So lightweight, it weighs less than a can of soda. With a compact DV, balanced and ready to go, the Merlin weighs about two pounds. Its rigid construction permits longer focal lengths than ever imaginable with a hand-held stabilizer.

Want to see what the effect is on your shots?

Continue reading ‘Steadicam Merlin for smooth shots’




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