Nicolas Raddatz
May 21st, 2008, 04:57 PM
Hi all,
After researching a lot about DOF adapters, I have some questions regarding its usage.
1) Filming wide open
For what i've seen, If one chooses to film with a DOF adapter, it seems most people end up filming wide open all the time because of the inherent light loss of the device. I wonder, doesn't that limit you too much? Isn't it tiring to have all of your footage with such a shallow DOF?
Of course, you could say that if you don't need shallow DOF, there's no point in using the DOF adapter at all. But what if you want small DOF in some shots, and deep DOF in others?
Which brings me to the next question:
2) Mixing footage
So, you want to have shallow DOF in shome shots, and deep DOF in others. You could a) Use a DOF adapter for shallow DOF, and using the camera lens for deep DOF or b) Use a DOF adapter all of the time, but you probably won't be able to step down a lot (I guess not more than f/3.5 or f/5.6), and there will be a noticeable loss of image quality.
Let's suppose you go a) and film some scenes with the adapter, and some scenes without it. How do you deal with mixing such different footage? I mean, the 35mm optics add a lot of texture, there's no way in the world you can make both look the same...If you go b) well, we're back at question 1) which is, how not to make the footage boring by having everything with shallow dof.
I'd like to hear how are YOU dealing with those problems, what are the tradeoffs that work for you, how's your workflow regarding this....
THANKS A LOT!!!
After researching a lot about DOF adapters, I have some questions regarding its usage.
1) Filming wide open
For what i've seen, If one chooses to film with a DOF adapter, it seems most people end up filming wide open all the time because of the inherent light loss of the device. I wonder, doesn't that limit you too much? Isn't it tiring to have all of your footage with such a shallow DOF?
Of course, you could say that if you don't need shallow DOF, there's no point in using the DOF adapter at all. But what if you want small DOF in some shots, and deep DOF in others?
Which brings me to the next question:
2) Mixing footage
So, you want to have shallow DOF in shome shots, and deep DOF in others. You could a) Use a DOF adapter for shallow DOF, and using the camera lens for deep DOF or b) Use a DOF adapter all of the time, but you probably won't be able to step down a lot (I guess not more than f/3.5 or f/5.6), and there will be a noticeable loss of image quality.
Let's suppose you go a) and film some scenes with the adapter, and some scenes without it. How do you deal with mixing such different footage? I mean, the 35mm optics add a lot of texture, there's no way in the world you can make both look the same...If you go b) well, we're back at question 1) which is, how not to make the footage boring by having everything with shallow dof.
I'd like to hear how are YOU dealing with those problems, what are the tradeoffs that work for you, how's your workflow regarding this....
THANKS A LOT!!!