Jump to content

Post one of your setups


DavidSloan

Recommended Posts

Guest Ken Maskrey
I used a little maglight (one of the ones that takes one AAA) taped to the front of the lens so it'd reflect in both eyes but not show up as a source of light. I was pretty happy with that.

 

I like the maglight trick...are there any others for getting the eye reflection? What about using those little lens lamps on the flexible cables for seeing the T#s...would those get me an eyelight reflection?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Premium Member
I like the maglight trick...are there any others for getting the eye reflection? What about using those little lens lamps on the flexible cables for seeing the T#s...would those get me an eyelight reflection?

 

I did that once, outside at night. It worked fine for a little glint in the eye, but the AC wanted his lenslite back so he could see the barrel markings...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

the AC wanted his lenslite back so he could see the barrel markings...

 

When I was doing Focus, I always used to insist on a 2k right next to the lens on night shoots. That way the lens markings were visible from 30 feet away and the lamp kept me nice and warm..... ;-)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Premium Member
makeup is very important - I have done stuff where the make up artist made more than me - and I know of make up girls here in the UK who charge between £300 to £500 a day and there is NO negotiation - (I am also sure there are more expensive ones out there)

 

Hi,

 

I did a shoot with a supermodel. The make up artist, hair stylist and nail artist all has agents!

 

Stephen

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Premium Member

I like to set a 20K two feet from the subject for key, a 20K three feet away for fill and hang a 20K above and behind for top light about four feet way. With a fire extinguisher and frequent replacement of actors... I'm set to go.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I like to set a 20K two feet from the subject for key, a 20K three feet away for fill and hang a 20K above and behind for top light about four feet way. With a fire extinguisher and frequent replacement of actors... I'm set to go.

 

He he. You joke but a gaffer friend of mine was working on a Bollywood set and experienced just such a request. Apparently, the Indian D.P. had never worked with such large fixtures before and made a call for a 10k HMI about 10 feet from a child actor. Fortunately, our boy was able to advise his boss on the matter. :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Using the sun or another powerful souce to bring out the shadows cast on an interior by moving vehicals outside looks wonderful. The distance and spread of the light source causes the shadow to have a trailing effect. Creating a lot of movement in frame, it fits only certain circumstances.

 

I am waiting to use this technique in a movie of my own... but next time your window shopping along a busy street look at the light play in the interiors.

 

Oh I almost forgot....remove the lens off a big eye and have the grips suspend it from the ceiling. Afterward instruct the actor to place his/her face in the center.....just a magical helo effect.

 

When I run out of adjectives I just call everything magical.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I like to set a 20K two feet from the subject for key, a 20K three feet away for fill and hang a 20K above and behind for top light about four feet way. With a fire extinguisher and frequent replacement of actors... I'm set to go.

 

Paul,

Maybe a Musco behind the camera - just for a little eyelight?

Edited by CMPhern
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I like to set a 20K two feet from the subject for key, a 20K three feet away for fill and hang a 20K above and behind for top light about four feet way. With a fire extinguisher and frequent replacement of actors... I'm set to go.

 

What's weird about that, it sounds like early 80's tabletop B)

 

(closer to the truth than you might think....)

 

-Sam

Link to comment
Share on other sites

G'day

 

Im pretty much a beginner at cinematography. Have been doing a little throught highschool, but have mainly only had the oportunity to do cutting. Just posting two setups here. Both shot with a 3-Chip Consumer Panasonic GS400 MiniDV camera, with a mixture of natural light and home depot styled floods.

 

spoon.JPG

^was having the kinda day that you shoot anything and just experiement, shot at about f1.7 @ 1/25, JPEG compression has done some weird things to this pic.

 

trigg.JPG

^decided to be a typical film student wank and letterbox this film to 2.35 because it was just a cool project to experiment with, i didnt notice the mirror till it was too late. this one was shot at about f4.0 @ 1/25

 

some feedback would be tops.

 

Cheers.

Edited by Matthew Parnell
Link to comment
Share on other sites

"JPEG compression has done some weird things to this pic."

 

So has the image editing program you used to alter the fluid in the spoon.

 

I didnt edit the fluid in the spoon. It is water in the spoon with the reflection of light through vertical blinds.

 

spoonbg.JPG

 

The reason why the verticals dont appear straight in the reflection is a little thing called surface tention, which created a curved surface. Thought about doing it in a physics class on day when talking about water and optics.

 

Cheers.

 

Matt.

Edited by Matthew Parnell
Link to comment
Share on other sites

That certainly an interesting reflection you've found. I'd consider trying to figure out what's causing that slightly cooler horizontal line running through the centre of the wavy vertical lines. If you could eliminate it it would make it much cleaner and more striking.

 

Learning how to manipulate reflective surfaces is a valuable skill for any DoP.

It's the basis for lighting cars and some product shooting.

Try stretching a white material somewhere on the angle of incidence, and shinging a light into it.

Move the light around and cut off parts of the light until you can create a reflection that you like.

 

 

The second shot might benefit from having a bit more light on the foreground actor. Something to maybe bring maybe one or two features of her face into proper exposure (like the far side of your background talents face).

If it fits into your scene, consider panning a couple lights through the windshield across your talents face to simulate headlights from cars driving by.

 

This is a pitfall of the camera you're using, but the shallow depth of field means that both actors are held in relative focus and it can be a bit distracting as we don't know which one to concentrate on.

Try opening up the iris as wide as you can (don't know what it is on your camera, maybe 2-2.8) and using Neutral Density filters (all the better if they're built into your camera) to compensate.

That might help reduce the depth of field slightly.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...
  • 3 months later...

This thread is awesome. Just found it, and have enjoyed reading all of it. Thanks!

 

 

Pappas

 

 

 

 

Michael Pappas

Arrfilms@hotmail.com

http://www.Myspace.com/PappasArts

PappasArts & Arrfilms Main site

XLH1 and HVX200 frame grabs and news here:

http://www.pbase.com/Arrfilms

http://www.PappasArts.com

CONTACT VIA AOL INSTANT MESSENGER

AT { PAPPASARTS2 }

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi, This are some digital stills (canon rebel xt) refrences for the printing of something shot on 5279. Really close look of the final pritn on vision. Well DOF was totalley different.

The interiors were done with 2k open faces through 6*6 dif and gold gel adn the bounce/fill was done with a 3*3 piece of wood. I dont remeber all the expuseres because I did it by eye and just exposed or over exposed the key light by a stop or something. FG elements were backlight by midgtes.

All that was shot in a classroom. just dressed it up for camera.

 

The exterior was uncorrected tungsten. exposing for the outside.

 

 

 

her is one more...

 

on this link cant upload more images to the post...

 

3

5

6

7

Miguel

Edited by Miguel Teitelboim
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...