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Ruby Gold

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  • Occupation
    Producer

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  • Website URL
    http://www.savingtimeproductions.com
  1. Cool Walter. Thanks for the encouragement. The interviewer will not be on camera, so I will use and modify your suggestions accordingly. Seems I'll have to use a stronger key than I ordinarily use in order to light two faces properly, or just maybe use the barn doors as you suggested and make it more diffuse rather than focused. Still am not quite clear how this won't throw shadow onto the other interviewee, but like everything, it will probably make more sense once I play with it with stand-ins. Thanks again-- Ruby
  2. Thanks you guys--these are all great suggestions--really appreciate it. I like the concept of treating the small group as a single subject (to some degree) in how you light them. Although I can imagine that where you place them and and if they move much can have a big impact on who gets whose shadows on their face. Thanks again! Ruby
  3. Thanks you guys for the suggestions. Because I'm fairly ignorant--having only done basic 3 and 4 point lighting set-ups for one-person interviews with just a key, fill, hairlight and sometimes background light, and because what I have in my kit (and the only lights I'm familiar with) are an Omni, Tota, Pro and small Rifa--can either of you (or anyone else) point me in the direction of some good sites/tutorials to help me educate myself around the type of set-ups you're describing? Of course, I get the gist of what you mean, but have no experience with using any of the set-up/lights you've described. Thanks again for the help. Ruby
  4. Hi all. For the digital video productions I've shot (I'm using DVX100b), I've only used my basic Lowell kit and only lit single-subject interviews with pretty classic three or four-point lighting. I feel fairly confident within that set-up, the lighting has looked good, nice modeling, etc. However, I now have some shoots coming up that will be interviews with two or three people and I'm totally clueless about how best to arrange and light them so that I'm not casting one person's shadows on another, etc. I'm sure I'll have to rent other lights in order to make this work, but I'd greatly appreciate suggestions and/or useful links regarding simple/best ways to arrange and light two or three folks in an interview set-up. Thanks to all for any help you can offer!
  5. Now why didn't I think of that?? <_< and, yes, it's my real name...
  6. Thanks so much for this incredibly thoughtful response--really helpful. I'm thinking your first comment about the ND warning indicating white card overexposure and therefore setting the WB incorrectly because the color channels were clipped is likely what happened. If this were the case, in the future wd the better thing to do be to close the iris down enough for the ND warning does not appear, and then white balance? Do you think that wd correct it? All your points about the LCD are well taken and I get it--sadly I don't have a monitor, and, until now relying on the zebras has worked for me. I was surprised by your comment about 85% being too bright for AA skin. I usually set them at 80% for Caucasian skin and 85% for dark skin. Am I going in the wrong direction? I thought that a higher percentage (e.g. 85 vs. 80) wd allow more brightness in order to accurately assess exposure for darker skin. Not so? What wd you typically set zebras at for Caucasian and AA skin on a DVX100b? Thanks again for your help and I hope you don't mind the additional questions.
  7. I shot an interview with my DVX100b yesterday, using 3-point lighting and manually white balanced the camera. White balance was achieved, though the "ND 1/8" indicator flashed at the same time, for a second, and I'm not sure what that meant. I set my zebras at 85% (my subject was African-American) and set the exposure manually so that the zebras were just barely visible on her highlights (about 5.6). In the LCD it looked great. Now that I'm looking at the captured footage, it looks slightly yellow and her highlights look too hot. Given that the zebras weren't really visible, hardly, and the manual white balance was achieved, I'm not sure why it's too yellow and the highlights too hot. I want to correct this before the next interview, so all help greatly appreciated--particularly around why the ND 1/8 indicator came on and what I might have done wrong. Thanks!
  8. Thanks Daniel. Yeah, I checked the battery straight away--it's fine, and the path was okay too. Using the rocker on the camera--it's not jumpy at all, so, thankfully, it's not the gears/motor. I have a shoot coming up and felt like I needed to work this out so I bought a Varizoom VZ-Rock-DVX Zoom Control with Touch Sensitive Rocker Switch from B and H, in hopes that that will work smoothly. Any thoughts/experience with it? I'll check the servo switch to make sure it was cleanly engaged--thanks for the suggestion--and, if that was the problem, will shoot myself for having spent $240 unnecessarily!! Thanks again.
  9. Thanks for the response, and forgive my ignorance--but what is a ZOE? Also--what wd you do the situation described? Say the interviewee is saying something particularly poignant and you want to come in for a nice smooth, slow close-up? thanks-
  10. I have a series of interviews to conduct by myself using my DVX100B. I need the talent to look to the side of the camera in order for the shot to be framed/look right, so I planned to sit a foot or so to the side of the camera (alternating sides with various interviewees) so they have someone to look at/engage with as I ask the interview questions. With my old camera, I've been able to do this (with a little clamshell hooked up as a monitor) and use the remote to do nice slow zooms for close-ups and pull back out again. When I tried this out with my new DVX100B, I found the remote zoom to be very uneven--speeding up, slowing down, stopping--basically delivering unacceptable performance for a production. Does anyone know if the wired remote does zoom any smoother? thanks!
  11. Thanks a lot for the great feedback you guys! Ruby
  12. Hi there. I'm relatively new to my DVX100b and have only shot in 60i for my projects with it. Mostly I've chosen this because a) it's familiar; B) 60i handles motion more cleanly; and c) I was scared of the commitment to 24p shooting and editing. I keep hearing how beautiful the filmic look of 24p can be, and I have a new project coming up, so I went out and shot some test stuff in 24p and 60i just to compare. I do see what everyone is talking about in terms of the creaminess of the colors and the filmic look of the motion. What I also noticed on the stuff I shot is that the 24p looked a bit dark to my eye, somewhat 'slow motion-y' when focusing on a flag waving in the wind, and it seemed as if sharp focus was harder to achieve than in 60i. My questions to the forum are: I noticed that the 24p setting has a 1/24 shutter speed. Does 24p 'work' with a faster shutter speed and wd that help with the 'dark' look or does 24p need to be shot at 1/24? Does one typically need to use a lower f-stop with 24p than 60i--or, is the darker image I'm referring to not typically a problem for most folks? Some of the footage I shot in 24p seemed to be a bit out of focus where the stuff I shot in 60i with the same settings was nicely focused. I had the camera was on autofocus most of the time, so I'm wondering if the difficulty with focus is because of the slower shutter speed in 24p? Or some other factor related to 24p? Or using auto instead of manual focus? I was doing street shots, so it seemed easier to just put it on auto focus while shooting these tests. Any illumination here greatly appreciated. Last, but not least. I edit in PPro 1.5. If I edit on a 24p timeline, can 60i footage be used on the same timeline as the footage shot in 24p? Conversely, if I edit on a 60i timeline, can 24p footage be used along with 60i? I'm thinking of shooting interview footage in 24p and my outdoor cutaways with more motion in them in 60i, but don't know if you can mix the two on one timeline. Again, any help here greatly appreciated. Thanks!
  13. Thanks to all for your input! I'm actually creating a DVD (so, not broadcast and not Internet) that will be used in various programs to help ex-offenders about to be released from county jail in dealing with finding housing, dealing with their own recovery from drugs/alcohol, and dealing with money and finances so they can make it on the outside. Part of the script in the "dealing with money" section has VO talking about money and how hard it is to make it, deal with it, etc etc and the plan was to use imagery related to money (e.g. check cashing places, ATMs, etc), along with images of consumerism to run over the VO. Hence the images from store windows. Most of the stills I shot DON'T have the company's logo in it, however I'm aware that these ads are somebody's pictures and I don't want to be a jerk and use without permission OR get sued. I'm talking a total of maybe 30 to 60 seconds in the entire production, so it's a long shot that anyone would sue me, but... the project is being financed by a government entity so I figure I should be somewhat careful and see what info I can dig up. I know that any people on the street are fair game, but just assume that these pictures are owned by either the photographer who took them or the store who paid for them, so I don't know what could come of it. Any more thoughts? thanks- Ruby
  14. Does anyone know if you're shooting stills on the street for use in a production, and there is a store ad (like a giant GAP photograph of a model in the store window) in your image, are you violating copyright to use the image without permission? Thanks-
  15. After the focus problems with my brand new 100B that I described in an earlier post, I ended up sending the camera in to be checked out. Turns out the repair guy did find a slight misalignment in the focus which he said he corrected. Just got the camera back and I'm still noticing a very slight soft focus when close in, so I'm wondering if it's me or the camera. I'm paranoid that I may have a defective camera, and I want to replace it if that's the case, but the soft focus is so slight, and I'm so new to the camera, that I can't tell if it's me or the cam. To reiterate the problem: I'm shooting in indoor settings with 3 or 4 point studio lighting, iris is manually set and ranges from f/5.6 to f/6.8. I set manual focus by zooming in to Z99, focusing, and then zooming back out to frame the shot. When zooming back in after this for close-ups, I've had a little bit of a problem with soft focus on close shots. It's not on every close-up shot, but has appeared somewhat randomly both before I sent the camera in and after. I don't notice the soft focus on the lcd screen when shooting, but after capturing the footage. I'm also noticing that across shoots, even when the face is totally in focus, the person's jewelry (true on three different shoots/people) is not. For example hoop earrings or necklaces are blurry while the face and neck are in focus. I know shiny things can be a problem for auto focus, but I'm in manual. Any thoughts on why this might be occurring, and if this is an indication that wd confirm something's wrong with the camera? Or is it me? I've attached screenshots showing the soft focus issue when more zoomed in (the man), and the blurry earrings/focused face thing (the woman). All thoughts appreciated on whether it's me or the cam. I want to stop tripping about this, but if there truly is something defective with the camera, I don't want to ignore it. thanks again- Ruby
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