Chris Fernando
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Everything posted by Chris Fernando
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Waveform Monitors and Vectorscopes
Chris Fernando replied to Chris Fernando's topic in Lighting for Film & Video
Very useful and much appreciated. Thank you, Hal. -
I'm curious as to where you guys have familiarized yourselves and become acquainted with waveform monitors and vectorscopes. Obviously on-set would be one place but I only ask because I never had the opportunity to get my hands on one in school and I still don't see many classes out there offering training on them or integrating them into the curriculum (yet). Thanks, as always, for the input.
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Please don't remove my account
Chris Fernando replied to John Hawkinson's topic in General Discussion
Hey guys (and girls) is this the "Post something so as to not get bumped thread"? -
Speaking of which: I'm curious as to where you guys have familiarized yourselves and become acquainted with waveform monitors and vectorscopes. Obviously on-set would be one place but I only ask because I never had the opportunity to get my hands on one in school and I still don't see many classes out there offering training on them (yet). Thanks, as always, for the input.
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Superman Returns
Chris Fernando replied to Michael Collier's topic in On Screen / Reviews & Observations
It's amazing what a quarter of a billion will get you these days, isn't it? We could have had two "Waterworld's" for that price! -
Blade Runner: The Final Cut
Chris Fernando replied to Jason Debus's topic in On Screen / Reviews & Observations
Hayden Christiansen will be playing the ghost of Roy Batty :blink: -
It all depends on usage of the word inability, I suppose. I think at some point that inability must become ability, in every sense of the word, if you are going to ask people to give up two hours of their time to hear what you have to say. It shouldn't look like you were "unable" to do something.
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So necessity breeds creativity.
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I'm sorry, I'm going to need some help with this one.
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Digital Photography
Chris Fernando replied to Arnaud M. St Martin de Veyran's topic in General Discussion
If I'm not mistaken I think Nikon is a bit more backwards compatible with their lenses (i.e. older versions) - I know for a fact Nikon is, not sure about Canon. That being said however the functionality of the newer AF Nikkors vs manual focus lenses, on the D70 at least, is like night and day. But perhaps you might like the looks a certain older lens/series gives you. -
After Vision 2 and Eterna, Whats Next?
Chris Fernando replied to Stephen Whitehead's topic in Film Stocks & Processing
You can already tow a small car with Estar base print films! Good to hear though. -
After Vision 2 and Eterna, Whats Next?
Chris Fernando replied to Stephen Whitehead's topic in Film Stocks & Processing
Film is dead: http://www.imaging.org/conferences/icis06/...ils.cfm?pass=38 http://www.photo.net/bboard/big-image?bboa...oad_id=29939084 Perhaps Mr. Pytlak can shed some light on newer developments -
Digital Photography
Chris Fernando replied to Arnaud M. St Martin de Veyran's topic in General Discussion
I second what Craig says about good glass. First and foremost, however, remember that the equipment is not what defines the photographer, the photograph does (among other things in life). From what I have heard you can't go wrong either way-Canon v. Nikon-most people continue along the line of what they've been using instead of having to invest in new glass/equipment. You're decision might also partly depend on what your intended usage of the camera is. Just remember that the Canon 350 nor the D70s do a true uncompressed RAW, for that you need to fork over $1700 for the D200 or $2900 for the 5D. From what I've read this is something of a moot point since the info that they are throwing away is not needed (i.e. highlight info). This has never really made sense to me (other than the storage issue), but whatever. Once you know what you are doing with the camera this is all water under the bridge anyway. BTW: I have no complaints with my D70s, other than the fact that I don't have all the glass I want. Try these sites out there's probably a dozen Rebel v. D70 threads on each one: http://www.photo.net/ http://www.nikonians.org/ Good luck. -
Lawrence of Arabia 70mm Screening
Chris Fernando replied to Brian Rose's topic in On Screen / Reviews & Observations
Saturday, June 3rd at LACMA. http://www.lacma.org/programs/FilmListing.aspx#written It says it's a 70 mil print as well. Saw it at the Arclight in said format about 3 years ago and it put everything else in perspective. -
Thanks. You guys just saved me $10!
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Eric, Just curious as to how you will be setting up your Canon DSLR to emulate what's on film. Best of luck and keep posting.
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A bit off topic, forgive me (didn't warrant a whole new thread), but I can't wait to see what Doyle and Shyamalan have up their sleeve for The Lady in the Water.
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Stephen, My aplogies if I came across as singling you and your post out. That was not my intention. I was only using it to get to the "horse's mouth".
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Jim, Excuse my uninformed nature, but what are the specs on the RED-Drive? I assume you didn't mention 4k under 20k due to storage issues, again maybe I'm missing something here. What type of accesories will it support; I'm assuming the standard Arri products/specs? Any other manufacturers as far as MB's go, or will one have to shell out another 4k for a matte box? Perhaps there's a FAQ link to all this somewhere. Thanks.
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Instead of all the speculation why not ask Jim (Jannard, that is) since he's here. Of course sticks and lights are "extras". If Jim Jannard were going to take this thing out on a show what does he figure it would cost him. I'm thinking this probably includes a full set of decent primes (PL mount?) and a nice zoom (?). In all the posts on all these forums, all I'm reading is hyperbole, market speak and what is becoming diatribe with no solid concrete numbers. Just asking here.
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Stephen, Agreed. He is not qualified, yet. My point being (a question even) is that it was not his job to confirm that he did not have the relevant film experience (he already knew that). He is free to apply to whatever job he chooses. Should it not be the responsibility of his employer to confirm that he had the relevant experience? As far as what it takes to first, I agree wholeheartedly, that it involves more than just pulling focus, thus why I called it "pulling/1st(ing)", and I put pulling first intentionally; because IMHO that is the most important aspect, perhaps that will change with time/more experience. David, Agreed as well. There are far-reaching aspects to the job that one can only become most familiar with through repitition and actually doing it, herein lies the catch-22, I suppose. I guess if you don't know how to scratch test a mag, check focus marks on a lens, etc., etc, you might not find yourself at the prep in the first place. But this is not to say that every first that goes into a prep knows everything about every camera on that facilities shelves. I may know how to chage a fuse on a Moviecam Compact but that doesn't mean that I know how to change one on a 535. Isn't this part of what a prep is supposed to entail, and partly why a prep tech is present for the duration of your check-out/prep?
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Not his fault though, right? He applied for a job and he got it. Everybody shows up not knowing something, it's just matter of how much you don't know. He (or she) has got to get his first film gig at some point. Did he have all the tools to pull/1st properly on film?
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Don't know the exact specs on the db levels. But the last two show I worked on were BL4S shows and on both occasions in the tight quarters we were shooting in, sound requested that we throw a furnee (sp.) over the camera. I know they tend to get louder with longer lenses on (i.e. bigger zooms) and possibly as they get older (?). The second to the last one we rented actually had a rubber lined PL mount to combat this along with a filter tray with rubber strips attached around the frame on both sides to also help with noise. It definitely seems to be quieter with primes on and in the words of the tech prep, "It becomes a horn with a big zoom on"(we had the Angie 25-250). Hope this helps.
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Forget Dolby and DTS...MONO sound is where it's at
Chris Fernando replied to Michael Ryan's topic in Directors and Directing
I'm assuming (since he actually took the time to let you have a listen) that you were listening to that vinyl on some high quality audio equipment. Sonically speaking, listening through well placed audiophile-quality equipment is night and day from listening to something coming out of the latest Sony POS-1234 Home-Theatre-In-A-Box randomly thrown into the corner of someones living room, because that was the only space left. -
The Murdoch VW8000 Digital Cinematography Camera
Chris Fernando replied to a topic in General Discussion
Don't forget about the upgrade version that will go to the theatre and have the whole cinematic experience for you.