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Henry Cohn

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  • Occupation
    Student
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    Edinburgh
  1. Thanks! That's working very well, though I'm unsure how much the Quicktime movie compromises image quality.
  2. Steadicam is definitely a good idea. You could imitate CCTV footage and use fishbowl lenses to get the convex look because even though CCTV footage isn't like that any more, low quality convex should still give instant recognition as CCTV. Try it in academy ratio as well, though that might not look good together with 1.77 footage. You could also have all the captions that go on CCTV footage in a pixel typeface.
  3. aapo lettinen, I understand that onion skinning is important for some stop motion animation, but for traditional cel animation it isn't necessary because you see previously taken frames on a lightbox. Which is why a camera that films stop motion could be very useful, plus onion skinning could be done on the monitor.
  4. Thanks. If it doesn't make any difference, I'll probably just set a zoom lens to around 50mm. I decided to ask this on yahoo answers, where it was recommended that I use a macro lens or a process lens.
  5. Are there any good image quality digital cameras that can do stop motion without the $200 middle man of crap computer software? I just don't understand why most film-shooting cameras can do it but not modern digital ones.
  6. I would like to hear your thoughts on what sort of lens is best for photographing something with little to no depth. I'm not considering a multiplane set-up but would be pleased to also hear thoughts on that.
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