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shooting miniatures


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would love to get some recomendations on reading material apart from the ASC manual

. id like to shoot a cityscape , gotham city esque so any advice on lighting/shooting miniatures for night too would help

cheers!

j

 

 

Take a look at this thread: http://www.cinematography.com/index.php?sh...mp;hl=miniature

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what im finding hard to get my head around is if i have to stop down to a pinhole / f22 to get an even depth of field , and have the model extremely well lit , then how am i going to acheive a convincing 'night time' look in post reducing the exposure and grading it in shake will get something close but it wont be the same... i guess its finding a compromise and doing tests and the larger i make the model the less i need to light it . i was just wondering if i could somehow light the model for a night EXT

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what im finding hard to get my head around is if i have to stop down to a pinhole / f22 to get an even depth of field , and have the model extremely well lit , then how am i going to acheive a convincing 'night time' look in post reducing the exposure and grading it in shake will get something close but it wont be the same... i guess its finding a compromise and doing tests and the larger i make the model the less i need to light it . i was just wondering if i could somehow light the model for a night EXT

 

You need to stop down to get the correct DOF, but if you shoot at very low frame rates, you can increase the per frame exposure time so that your light level is not overpowering the lights in the model. Or shoot the city lights in a separate pass / exposure than the overall lighting.

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You need to stop down to get the correct DOF, but if you shoot at very low frame rates, you can increase the per frame exposure time so that your light level is not overpowering the lights in the model. Or shoot the city lights in a separate pass / exposure than the overall lighting.

 

thanks for everyones replies !

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