Julian Quinto
June 17th, 2004, 03:40 AM
Good day all, this is my first post! Reading all the posts here regarding the VX2100 has been an overwhelming experience for me, but I'd still want some personal comments about purchasing a VX2100 for my personal and creative use.
Let me give a little background first to help you a bit. I'm taking up film and got into it because of my editing jobs when I was in my first year of college, and shifted courses just last year. The money that will be used in my purchase of the VX2100 solely comes from my extracurricular work as an avid editor (MTV Philippines videos, short films, a few features, and a handful of corporate videos) and will be used in my undergrad courses. After having worked so hard just to gather enough money to buy a decent cam, I'm a bit scared on spending on an investment that may leave me dissatisfied.
First: I love the DVX100/A. We've used these a few times on some projects, and I've grown to know the ins and outs of the camera. Love the optics too. But it's just too expensive for me. I've also used a variety of other cams such as the VX2k, XL1/s, and the GL2, but found the DVX100/A perfect for me.
Second: I'm also looking into the Panny DVC-80 and DVC-30. I've had no previous experience with them but some say the 80 is much like the DVX100 but without the 24p and CineGamma. I was interested, but there are currently no stocks here locally.
Third: The VX2100 that I've found here is at a compelling price point that will let me purchase other items that I need without leaving me bankrupt. Having used the VX2k before, I have no qualms about it. I've used Magic Bullet on footage from the VX2k a few times with exceptional results. This is the cam that I can afford and work with *right now*.
I know that this is a VX2k/VX2100-specific board, but I'd still like a few encouraging remarks about my decision. I want a fully manual camera that I will be able to use for my video projects on the way to my film thesis, and maybe earn a few bucks with it. I'll be purchasing it two days from now and I just can't seem to feel confident with my decision. This will be used on some short films, video projects, experimental films, documentaries, etc., so I just want to feel secure with my decision. And the 24p is not much of a factor now because I've already purchased the Magic Bullet Suite before for some projects, but I will miss the adjustable Gamma.
Will this camera fit my needs? Can you help in reassuring me?
Let me give a little background first to help you a bit. I'm taking up film and got into it because of my editing jobs when I was in my first year of college, and shifted courses just last year. The money that will be used in my purchase of the VX2100 solely comes from my extracurricular work as an avid editor (MTV Philippines videos, short films, a few features, and a handful of corporate videos) and will be used in my undergrad courses. After having worked so hard just to gather enough money to buy a decent cam, I'm a bit scared on spending on an investment that may leave me dissatisfied.
First: I love the DVX100/A. We've used these a few times on some projects, and I've grown to know the ins and outs of the camera. Love the optics too. But it's just too expensive for me. I've also used a variety of other cams such as the VX2k, XL1/s, and the GL2, but found the DVX100/A perfect for me.
Second: I'm also looking into the Panny DVC-80 and DVC-30. I've had no previous experience with them but some say the 80 is much like the DVX100 but without the 24p and CineGamma. I was interested, but there are currently no stocks here locally.
Third: The VX2100 that I've found here is at a compelling price point that will let me purchase other items that I need without leaving me bankrupt. Having used the VX2k before, I have no qualms about it. I've used Magic Bullet on footage from the VX2k a few times with exceptional results. This is the cam that I can afford and work with *right now*.
I know that this is a VX2k/VX2100-specific board, but I'd still like a few encouraging remarks about my decision. I want a fully manual camera that I will be able to use for my video projects on the way to my film thesis, and maybe earn a few bucks with it. I'll be purchasing it two days from now and I just can't seem to feel confident with my decision. This will be used on some short films, video projects, experimental films, documentaries, etc., so I just want to feel secure with my decision. And the 24p is not much of a factor now because I've already purchased the Magic Bullet Suite before for some projects, but I will miss the adjustable Gamma.
Will this camera fit my needs? Can you help in reassuring me?