Tom Hardwick
October 28th, 2006, 08:45 AM
Sadly (very sadly) many cameras announce that you've made changes to the manual exposure, and the half stop changes (up or down, apertures as well as gain settings) are all too obvious on my old VX2000.
I was giving a tom-talk to Finchley Video Society last night (great interactive audience BTW) and one of my demos is to show how I swoop behind the bride and groom as they enter the wedding breakfast room. Loud cheers greet their arrival as they make their way to the top table.
I follow with my super-wide in place, using my 'special walk' and use the top screen of the Z1 to 'steady-cam' behind them. This can look really good, but on my demo I show how they enter through double doors that needs artificial white balance and f/1.6 and end up 20 metres away in front of a huge window, sunlight streaming in and f/8 desperately needed.
OK, there's little I can do about the white balance change and I have to leave this to the timeline (easy with key frames and the Canopus white balance filter), but the exposure *must* be locked off (white dress, bright window) and manually altered on the way. The Z1 allows me to do this imperceptibly, and my left thumb can roll that beautifully damped iris wheel so that the picture retains locked exposure but at the same time has a smoothly varying exposure.
I always had trouble doing this on the VX2000 because the side-screen (when the camera's used at waist height to avoid converging verticals) gets in the way of the little exposure wheel. The Z1 has it sorted; indeed it has.
tom.
I was giving a tom-talk to Finchley Video Society last night (great interactive audience BTW) and one of my demos is to show how I swoop behind the bride and groom as they enter the wedding breakfast room. Loud cheers greet their arrival as they make their way to the top table.
I follow with my super-wide in place, using my 'special walk' and use the top screen of the Z1 to 'steady-cam' behind them. This can look really good, but on my demo I show how they enter through double doors that needs artificial white balance and f/1.6 and end up 20 metres away in front of a huge window, sunlight streaming in and f/8 desperately needed.
OK, there's little I can do about the white balance change and I have to leave this to the timeline (easy with key frames and the Canopus white balance filter), but the exposure *must* be locked off (white dress, bright window) and manually altered on the way. The Z1 allows me to do this imperceptibly, and my left thumb can roll that beautifully damped iris wheel so that the picture retains locked exposure but at the same time has a smoothly varying exposure.
I always had trouble doing this on the VX2000 because the side-screen (when the camera's used at waist height to avoid converging verticals) gets in the way of the little exposure wheel. The Z1 has it sorted; indeed it has.
tom.