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RECENTLY I WROTE:
- My short Roger Ballen film
- Silent World by Lucie & Simon
- Canon users, look away now
- A photographer’s journey – Paul Clarke
- iPhone photography Awards 2012
- King’s Cross – London’s newest photo destination
- All About Eve – the brilliant Eve Arnold exhibition
- One man, thirteen half-marathons
- Leaving Bush House
- The Flickr overhaul we’ve been waiting for?
favourites
- How to photograph people
- London photography from the upper deck
- My nifty fifty – Canon 50mm lens
- Photographing actors – my mini photo essay
- Sound advice for DSLR videomakers
- The Italian scooter
- The largest indoor photo – by Jeffrey Martin
- The miniature world of London commuters
- Video: A photographer's journey, part 1
- Why I swapped the Best Camera for Instagram
Archives
My Twitter updates
- Google Is In Total Denial About Its Huge Problem With Google+ http://t.co/PnSZzyhF posted 14 hours ago
- RT @Trushar: If you missed this yesterday, interesting inteview with @Hermida by @poynter about 'social journalism' and Twitter: http:// ... posted 1 day ago
- Canon SLR Cameras Used to Film Stunts in The Avengers http://t.co/ppY5OOzW posted 1 day ago
- NIH Study: Coffee Really Does Make You Live Longer, After All http://t.co/CJxpIRKI >> yay! cc @nat_bur posted 1 day ago
- Facebook’s Saverin on giving up citizenship: “This had nothing to do with taxes” http://t.co/s0E5J33a >> but of course posted 1 day ago
- RT @paul_clarke: "If you can't beat laser cat, you probably deserve to die" Great piece on Flickr woes http://t.co/yXGjFPOc posted 2 days ago
photography
multimedia and photojournalism
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Tag Archives: video
The Slo Mo Guys
Meet The Slo Mo Guys. They have a camera which is capable of filming stuff at 5000 frames per second. And they are absolutely mental.
They set up a YouTube channel, where they upload videos of everyday stuff bursting, colliding, breaking, etc. – all in extreme slow motion. Such fun.
I think the last minute or so of this video is priceless, but watch the whole thing too:
More from them on their YouTube channel.
How to shoot DSLR video
If you own a relatively new DSLR, chances are it is capable of shooting high-quality video – and indeed many photographers, myself included, shoot short- and long-form video using their DSLR.
But for many the switch photography to videography is not easy. Not everyone has a great guru to teach them or enough patience and determination to discover how to use their camera’s more advanced features. Sometimes we even neglect or ignore the basics.
But thanks to the University of Waterloo in Canada and its Digital Arts Communication course in particular we have now access to a brilliant series of ten short videos explaining the basics of DSLR videography. The series was produced in July 2010 and, although made using a Canon DSLR, most of these short tutorials should satisfy any budding videographer, regardless of what DSLR they are using.
The first video in the series explains the advantages of shooting video with DSLRs (great quality, switchable lenses, shallow depth of field), but also points out the disadvantages – or rather challenges (not really built for video, the need for an external microphone).
The whole series can be found on the brilliant Vimeo Video School page (which is, by the way, very useful if you’re interested in more advanced tutorials too), but here are links to the remaining individual parts of the above series:
2. Lens assembly
3. On-off, recording, movie mode
4. Focal length & Prime vs Zoom
5. Perspective
6. Shutter speed and FPS (this one is particularly good)
7. Aperture
8. Depth of field
9. ISO
10. White balance
So these are just the basics. I would suggest you watch Philip Bloom’s series for Vimeo too – it also covers the basics, but Philip also explains many other useful things – including camera settings, timelapses, filming at night and dealing with sound.
If it wasn’t for his really annoying sidekick, this mini-series would be really fantastic:
Introduction to DSLR Cameras with Philip Bloom from Vimeo Staff on Vimeo.
The Milky Way
I remember the first time I saw The Milky Way. Not an image in a book or online. In real life. Right in front of my eyes. Or rather way above my head. It’s a mind-blowing experience, something we never see in big, light-polluted cities like London.
I was in South Africa, in the middle of the African bush, and one night while sitting by the fire we looked up and saw this:
It does put everything into perspective. You realise where you are in the Universe, or rather how insignificant you are in the context of what’s around you.
I had my DSLR with me, but I didn’t have a fast lens. I was ready for animal shots in the bright African sunshine, but not for long exposures in the middle of the night. That’s why the above image doesn’t do The Milky Way I saw any justice. It was multi-coloured, really rich, dense and indescribably beautiful.
If you’ve never seen the Milky Way in real life, the following timelapse video is a pretty good substitute.
It was filmed between 4th and 11th April 2011 by Terje Sorgjerd atop El Teide, Spain´s highest mountain. As he wrote, the mountain “is one of the best places in the world to photograph the stars and is also the location of Teide Observatories, considered to be one of the world´s best observatories. The goal was to capture the beautiful Milky Way galaxy along with one of the most amazing mountains I know El Teide.”
And the result is breathtaking. As always with Vimeo, go full screen and don’t miss the Sahara sandstorm some 30 seconds in:
The Mountain from Terje Sorgjerd on Vimeo.
And if you liked it, here’s another video Terje shot – at the famous Maeklong Market in Bangkok, where market stalls share their space with a railway line. Life on this planet has so many amazing aspects…
“Strange” camera modes explained
As explained by this guy and discovered by Annie Mole.
Which Canon lens to choose?
How many times have you asked yourself this question (assuming that you own a Canon camera)? We all want to spend our money wisely and read endless reviews and comparisons, search for the best prices and pray that the next Lotto ticket solves all our photography kit problems. Actually, the last one might be just me, but never mind.
I don’t have sufficient knowledge of all Canon lenses, but filmmaker Michael Gebben found someone who does. On his website has posted a video in which a Canon guy compares seven prime lenses currently produced by Canon.
It was filmed during a recent workshop in New Orleans which was sponsored by Canon and it was clearly made with filmmakers in mind.
The quality of most of those lenses is stunning. My favourite is the 50mm f1.2 lens. Sharp, ultra-fast and ultra-desirable.
I won’t check its price for now. Will wait for that Lotto win.
Video found via Canon Filmmakers.
Related articles
- Canon Applies For Patent On New 24-70 F/2.8L Lens (crunchgear.com)
- The Best Telephoto Lens for Wildlife Photography: Buying Guide & Recommendations (brighthub.com)
- 102 Year Old Lens (e-clecticism.blogspot.com)
Undercity and petrified children
I don’t even remember where I saw it first. But it got me hooked from the start. A video about New York’s ‘undercity’ shot using Canon 5D Mk II and a single prime lens.
Absolutely crazy and therefore brilliant. Its creator, Andrew Wonder, seems to specialise in filming people who can only be described as less ordinary:
See here for more of his vids.
Six minutes of extreme slow-motion destruction
This is what happens when you get your hands on a high-speed camera. Love it.
via PetaPixel
Time lapse on the iPhone
Judging by the queues outside Apple Stores everywhere yesterday, we should expect a deluge of iPhone 4 HD videos, well, right about now.
In the meantime, Phillip Bloom posted an interesting iPhone time lapse video of a Florida sunset. It was shot, rendered and edited using the iTimelapse app.
I’m tempted to play with it over the weekend, it’s only £1.79 from the App Store, looks pretty cool and you don’t need the latest iPhone to shoot a time lapse vid:
Thoughts? Have you used the app?
Eyjafjallajökull video shot using Canon 5D Mark II
This is beautiful. Thanks to @documentally and @kate_day for posting the link on Twitter in the first place.
Oh, and as always, go full screen.
Iceland, Eyjafjallajökull – May 1st and 2nd, 2010 from Sean Stiegemeier on Vimeo.
















