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Patrick Anton Saefkow Seaman_64263

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Everything posted by Patrick Anton Saefkow Seaman_64263

  1. Keep in mind that a day with the alexa is quoted at $1000 - $1500 from many places, and since you're getting similar quality with 16mm; it becomes a question of what you want to spend your arm and a leg on.
  2. I just got my hands on some arri standard schneider lenses for my arri sr2 with a pl mount. I did this knowing that adapters exist, but now that I go to buy one I'm a bit confused. This is the one I'm looking at, it screws into the lens and it's $50, so I can just buy 3 and not worry. http://www.ebay.ca/itm/361428900171?_trksid=p2060353.m2763.l2649&ssPageName=STRK%3AMEBIDX%3AIT Are there any options that are more in line with what I'm accustomed to where there is a single easy to use adapter? Something that properly adjusts the flange distance like when adapting m43 to ef, and basically acts like it is the mount that the lens expects to be seated in? I'd love to hear if you have any recommendations. Thanks.
  3. Nicholas I mean idiot in a sarcastic way to describe we who obsess over frame size and aperture :). Interesting stuff you have there. I'd experiment with that for personal use if I were into ultra wide aspect ratios, though 2.35 is extreme enough for me.
  4. I very rarely agree with Matt Workman on things, but he is right about some things. If you want to get a leg up in this business you want to do freebies, but it's up to you what that is. You can do short films with other starving artists, spec work, and produce videos for charities. When you get to a certain threshold it's important to be compensated even if it's less than your normal rate. If you do a lot of free work that will be your reputation; the guy who does free work. It's totally wrong to work for free on commercial shoots; where the producer will laugh all the way to the bank having exploited desperate young talent.
  5. For shutter speed you can calculate the difference using the simple formula of a/b/2. 60/24/2=1.25 or 1 1/3 stop Memorize the difference of common frame rates like 24, 48, 60, 120, 240 and so on, but you never know when you'll stumble upon something weird or want something specific. Just memorize the fstop scale and you're good as far as those are concerned. The math for figuring it out is too complex for my little brain. Just know that 8 is two more than 4, and 11 is one less than 16. Not as many integers as framerates, and most shots are in the T2-T8 range anyhow. I guess magic of knowing = 1 1/3 stop Iso is easy. Divide one unto the other. 800/640=1.25 or 1 1/3 stop
  6. Looks great. Like others have said; like a classic western film
  7. It depends. From what I've read when shooting 4k 24p mp4 is your only option, then with HD 24p it's just AVCHD. I don't own the camera, so I could be totally wrong. If you're shooting for 30p, maybe do a test to see which has better quality. I've heard AVCHD has more efficient compression, though I've never pitted two lossy compressions against each other; rather AVCHD vs ProRes or stuff like that.
  8. In my opinion it's best to shoot in the early morning; as that's when everyone's sleeping in, and you get shots that people won't at magic hour sunset.
  9. God is this argument pedantic. Haven't we reached an age where neither is objectively superior, but it's all down to preference? I think with the normalcy of digital the trend now is going the direction of picking formats for the sake of story. The dslr revolution has run it's course so serious artists are done experimenting, and will work with whatever suits them. Audiences accept both, so it from our end it's more like picking a lens for it's qualities; rather than from a technical standpoint.
  10. Ultra 16 goes between the perfs, and super 16 goes near the edge of the film stock. Why not do both? I understand that this is purely hypothetical, as no lab would add new processes nowadays; but would it be possible for the sake of widescreen 2.39:1 photography? My reasoning is if ultra 16 is 6.3mm tall, then 16/6.3=2.54 and 2.39x6.3 is roughly 15mm. This would mean a gate of 6.3x15mm or 94mm2 as compared to a gate of 4.29x10.26mm or 44m2; which is slightly more than twice the negative size. I get that in real world terms 2 perf 35mm is more accessible with more support, and still has a larger aperture; but it would be very appealing to have this increase in iq while still playing with the ergonomics and artistic advantages of these cameras. Is there some sort of technical limitation that prevents this from being possible? I can't be the first idiot to think of this.
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