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Kevin Desson

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Posts posted by Kevin Desson

  1. I work as a DP/Videographer. I think the point to remember here is, as a Cinematographer you're hired based on the artistic and technical merit of your body of work, not the work on your body!

     

    That said - "Good tattoos aren't cheap and cheap tattoos aren't good" :)

  2. I have both arms covered in 3/4 sleeves and have never once had an issue from a producer, director, client or anyone for that matter... usually just compliments on the artwork. Keep your tattoos tasteful and I'm sure you'll be fine.

  3. I just saw a story on this last night on the local news (Toronto). It said boxes of HDCAM SR tapes are selling on ebay for as much as $6000 usd with some people expecting the prices to quickly rise to upwards of $12000 usd. Sony is asking people to refrain from hoarding tape stock but you have to wonder why broadcasters, etc wouldn't start doing just that. Solid State anyone?

  4. Thanks for the links Jasper.

     

    For anyone who might be interested I came accross this handy tutorial:

     

    http://library.creativecow.net/articles/ro...p2_workflow.php

     

    He copies the files from the P2 card to an external drive to make a "master"....straightforward enough. Then to ingest the files to FCP he uses the external as the volume (rather than transfering the files directly from the P2 into FCP).

     

    I plan to use two external drives during my shoot, External A for copying footage from the P2, thus creating a Master, and then a second external (External B ) to store the Quicktime files after ingesting footage via FCP. Because I only have one firewire port on my Macbook, am I limited to first creating "Master" files on External A, unplugging it, then plugging in External B for ingest into FCP (so that I'm always connected via firewire) or is it possible/safe to have one external hooked up via firewire and the other via USB?

     

    Also, when my External A eventually fills up (200g) am I able to write the "Master" files to disk for permant back-up/storage, or do I have to keep buying external drive after external drive to ensure I always have a back-up of my native mxf files? (seems like that would get expensive real fast).

     

    Regards

     

    Kevin Desson

  5. I guess I'll start by listing my specs:

     

    2.4g Macbook Pro w/ Intel Duo Core Processor

    16G P2 Card

    PCMCIA to ExpressCard Addaptor

     

    Here's the problem. I tried to install the P2 software onto my computer, but there is a notice saying the software is not supported by my Intel Mac. I know there is a Panasonic support page where you can download updates, but I'm having some trouble navigating my way through the site. If anyone can shed some light on my problem or direct me to the page within the Panasonic web-site where I can download the driver software I need, it would be very much appreciated.

     

    Regards

     

    Kevin Desson

  6. When I first discovered this web-site, I think it was the first time I didn't even question using my real name or information on the web, it just made sense. Thanks to Tim and everyone else that contributes to making this site such a success.

     

    Cinematography.com is a gift and we should treat it as such!

     

     

    Regards

     

    Kevin

     

     

     

     

     

    (p.s.) please don't delete my account

  7. Hey John, thanks so much for your quick response. The stock was chosen/purchased before I was brough on to the project. With regards to the effects of the Push, I am purposely trying to add more grain to the image, but thanks for the warning.

  8. thanks John, but let me see if I've got this correct. If I light to my key, lets say 5.6, then anything in the scene not within 1/3 a stop, will be completely under or over exposed.

     

    Also, because of the slow speed of this stock (80asa if I read the Kodak site properly) I was planning to rate it at 125asa and then push it one full stop, do you see any problems with this?

     

    Thanks again

     

    Kevin

  9. Thanks for the replies. I am aware that silent films shot at 18fps would have been intended to be projected at or near that same frame rate, which is why I'm hesitant to shoot anything less than 22fps (using normal telecine) because I don't want the action to be overly sped-up.

     

    Also, could you please explain the effect of shooting 18fps and doing a telecine at that same fram rate.

     

    Thanks again,

     

    Kevin

  10. Looking for suggestions of a good framerate for shooting undercranked, to mimic films of the silent era. The director wants to shoot 20fps and I know back in the day 18fps was common, but I don't want to stray too far from 24fps, just enough so the effect is visable to the audience.

     

     

     

    Thanks,

     

     

    Kevin

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