Noa Put
September 24th, 2015, 02:19 AM
password: test
Private Video on Vimeo
About a month ago I had my first wedding where it almost rained the entire day, started to poor out of the skies around noon and didn't stop anymore, lot's of small and big problems throughout the day, my biggest frustration was the DJ, he cut all lights at the couples first entrance and 5 seconds later flooded everything with light, as I was on the steadicam I had to stop and adjust exposure to when all was dark to get a overexposed shot when he changed the light intensity again.
Worst problem was I had a tascam dr40 connected to his mixer, levels where checked, the first 2 speeches I monitor sound, all was ok so I leave it running for the rest of the evening to find out a month later in post the idiot has cut off the feed as well, from the 3rd speech soundlevel are suddenly so low there is hardly any signal and then there is only silence up until the last speech in the evening where the sound returns. So mr DJ found it necessary for whatever reason to play with the levels. Luckily I had a zoom h1 backup in front of the speaker which saved the day.
The photog was a friend of the family, he was a nice guy but had no wedding experience, the main problem he caused me was that he was talking a lot which took away a lot of natural moments and important voice recordings from family members because I had to cut out his talking. He also dragged along a big flash umbrella on a large lightstand and with a big and heavy battery to power the thing, during the photoshoot it was practically impossible to keep it out of my frame.
My rx10 also screwed up, it was at the back shooting along the aisle towards the altar and I had manually set and locked focus to find out during ceremony the focus had shifted from back to front resulting in totally out of focus images, this caused me to loose some important parts which I could take from my other 2 running camera's but not always in a optimal angle. That rx10 of mine is leading it's own life ever since I got it. By far the most unreliable camera out of my gearbag.
Then during the vows the priest surprised me by placing the couple against the altar and he was standing in front of them on the side blocking the view from my camera pointed at the groom, sigh...
The bride gave me a seat at a family table in the venue where I could eat with the rest of the guests, I had put my blackbird with the gh3/12mm right next to me, then a guest passes me, there is like 5 meters room yet he walks so close to me his foot hooks behind the blackbirds bottom bar (which was positioned on it kickstand) and steadicam and camera smash to the ground and slide meters further to stop in the middle of the dancefloor. My heart stops for a while but can't find any visual damage and all functions fine, phew...
Other then that all went fine :) with some editing wizardry I managed to hide any issues.
Some technical info; almost everything was shot handheld, with exception of the ceremonies where each time camera where on a tripod but one was used handheld as well. I don't use any rig with my gh4/rx10, only the camera without any accessories.
In the church I used a ax100 pointed at altar and lenctern so I could crop to reframe in post, I used one cx730 handheld and a rx10 on a tripod which was of no use for at least half of the church footage because of it's focus problem.
Steadicam footage is gh3 with a 12mm f2.0, the part between 00:23 and 00:57 was shot on the day prior to the wedding with a gh4 and a 12-35mm with the steadicam footage of the building and the couple driving off on their bicycles with the rattling cans attached was done with a 9-18mm olympus.
The images coming out of that camera can look so nice but it's such a hard camera to deal with during run and gun, I much prefer the ease of use of my rx10 here.
If anyone wants to know something more specific, just let me know.
Private Video on Vimeo
About a month ago I had my first wedding where it almost rained the entire day, started to poor out of the skies around noon and didn't stop anymore, lot's of small and big problems throughout the day, my biggest frustration was the DJ, he cut all lights at the couples first entrance and 5 seconds later flooded everything with light, as I was on the steadicam I had to stop and adjust exposure to when all was dark to get a overexposed shot when he changed the light intensity again.
Worst problem was I had a tascam dr40 connected to his mixer, levels where checked, the first 2 speeches I monitor sound, all was ok so I leave it running for the rest of the evening to find out a month later in post the idiot has cut off the feed as well, from the 3rd speech soundlevel are suddenly so low there is hardly any signal and then there is only silence up until the last speech in the evening where the sound returns. So mr DJ found it necessary for whatever reason to play with the levels. Luckily I had a zoom h1 backup in front of the speaker which saved the day.
The photog was a friend of the family, he was a nice guy but had no wedding experience, the main problem he caused me was that he was talking a lot which took away a lot of natural moments and important voice recordings from family members because I had to cut out his talking. He also dragged along a big flash umbrella on a large lightstand and with a big and heavy battery to power the thing, during the photoshoot it was practically impossible to keep it out of my frame.
My rx10 also screwed up, it was at the back shooting along the aisle towards the altar and I had manually set and locked focus to find out during ceremony the focus had shifted from back to front resulting in totally out of focus images, this caused me to loose some important parts which I could take from my other 2 running camera's but not always in a optimal angle. That rx10 of mine is leading it's own life ever since I got it. By far the most unreliable camera out of my gearbag.
Then during the vows the priest surprised me by placing the couple against the altar and he was standing in front of them on the side blocking the view from my camera pointed at the groom, sigh...
The bride gave me a seat at a family table in the venue where I could eat with the rest of the guests, I had put my blackbird with the gh3/12mm right next to me, then a guest passes me, there is like 5 meters room yet he walks so close to me his foot hooks behind the blackbirds bottom bar (which was positioned on it kickstand) and steadicam and camera smash to the ground and slide meters further to stop in the middle of the dancefloor. My heart stops for a while but can't find any visual damage and all functions fine, phew...
Other then that all went fine :) with some editing wizardry I managed to hide any issues.
Some technical info; almost everything was shot handheld, with exception of the ceremonies where each time camera where on a tripod but one was used handheld as well. I don't use any rig with my gh4/rx10, only the camera without any accessories.
In the church I used a ax100 pointed at altar and lenctern so I could crop to reframe in post, I used one cx730 handheld and a rx10 on a tripod which was of no use for at least half of the church footage because of it's focus problem.
Steadicam footage is gh3 with a 12mm f2.0, the part between 00:23 and 00:57 was shot on the day prior to the wedding with a gh4 and a 12-35mm with the steadicam footage of the building and the couple driving off on their bicycles with the rattling cans attached was done with a 9-18mm olympus.
The images coming out of that camera can look so nice but it's such a hard camera to deal with during run and gun, I much prefer the ease of use of my rx10 here.
If anyone wants to know something more specific, just let me know.