Glen Maw
September 28th, 2008, 02:06 AM
Hello there,
I've read a lot of the threads about shooting day for night, which I've found useful, but they all seem to be in reference to colour. I'm trying to copy a scene from an old black and white Mexican film from the '40s - it's a typical moonlight serenade.
If it helps...I'm shooting on HDV (hvr-v1) set to monochrome.
The threads seem to say: use a blue filter, but I'm wondering if this is true for black and white. I read an article (Shooting Day for Night (http://www.videomaker.com/article/10368/)) which begins by saying:
"In the halcyon days of black and white movies, day-for-night was easy because a red filter on the lens pumped up the contrast and recorded blue skies as jet black. Under-expose half a stop and you were in business."
For the record, I don't plan to shoot the sky, but moonlight in my Romeo's face would be nice. I'm not looking for the most realistic way to do it... only the most accurate way to replicate the old movies.
This is what I had in mind: YouTube - Cucurucucu Paloma (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RNcUe24K7r0&feature=related)
any suggestions would be very appreciated.
Glen
I've read a lot of the threads about shooting day for night, which I've found useful, but they all seem to be in reference to colour. I'm trying to copy a scene from an old black and white Mexican film from the '40s - it's a typical moonlight serenade.
If it helps...I'm shooting on HDV (hvr-v1) set to monochrome.
The threads seem to say: use a blue filter, but I'm wondering if this is true for black and white. I read an article (Shooting Day for Night (http://www.videomaker.com/article/10368/)) which begins by saying:
"In the halcyon days of black and white movies, day-for-night was easy because a red filter on the lens pumped up the contrast and recorded blue skies as jet black. Under-expose half a stop and you were in business."
For the record, I don't plan to shoot the sky, but moonlight in my Romeo's face would be nice. I'm not looking for the most realistic way to do it... only the most accurate way to replicate the old movies.
This is what I had in mind: YouTube - Cucurucucu Paloma (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RNcUe24K7r0&feature=related)
any suggestions would be very appreciated.
Glen