Updates from May, 2009

  • Review: Helios sun path calculator for iPhone (versus sunPATH)

    Ed Moore 3:48 am on May 31, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: helios, iphone, , review, sunpath

    If you were shooting inside with a single light, you’d be concerned about where it was located and what direction it was pointing in, right? ¬†You wouldn’t just get someone to randomly position and focus it, then work around whatever it gave you. ¬†You want your lighting tools to do the best job they possibly can.

    Unless you have a huge budget for serious HMI firepower, shooting day exteriors means you have one lighting unit only – the sun. ¬†And whilst you can’t control where and when it’s going to appear, you can calculate both of those and use that information to your advantage. ¬†A sun position calculator draws on a heady yet ultimately simple bunch of celestial mechanics to figure out the path of the sun through the sky at any given point on the Earth, for any given time.

    Using that knowledge, you can perform all sorts of tricks, from the simple to the incredibly helpful:

    • Work out sunrise and sunset times for anywhere on the planet on any date
    • Work out exactly what compass bearing the sunrise will appear at, for those glorious long lens African savannah shots
    • Work out how long the shadow of any given object will be at any time of day
    • If your shooting location is surrounded by tall objects like buildings or trees, work out – months or years in advance of the shoot if necessary – the precise time when the sun will clear the top of a building that’s 55 degrees above the horizon from where your subject’s going to be standing

    It’s a tool any DoP, gaffer or professional stills photographer needs to have in their arsenal. And thanks to the iPhone, we have a perfect mobile computing platform for the job, and thankfully the guys at Chemical Wedding have stepped up. (More …)

     
  • Why the RED modular system is good news for Steadicam operators

    Ed Moore 2:56 pm on November 28, 2008 | 6 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: epic, , scarlet, , wingrove

    If you’re reading this, it probably hasn’t escaped your attention that RED recently announced a new, extremely modular approach to digital cinema cameras.¬† Having had lunch with Garrett Brown (forgive a guy for being proud) which inevitably involved a lot of chat on how the steadicam system has evolved over the years, Jason Wingrove‘s twitter jumped out at me.

    If RED can come up with (and I’m sure they will) a sensible range of cabling to attach their various modules together, Jason’s suggestion would produce a really interesting rig.¬† Traditionally if you want ‘feature film quality’ you’re looking at a big and heavy camera, with a Steadicam rig to match.¬† RED can be configured in any number of ways to meet and arguably exceed today’s concept of ‘feature film quality’, but with just the tiny sensor module and a lens at the top and everything else down below as the counterbalance, you have a lightweight system, requiring only a lightweight rig.¬† Hurrah!

     
  • Very briefly: RED rock the world

    Ed Moore 11:09 am on November 13, 2008 | 3 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: ,

    I will blog about this properly later, but RED really lived up to their hype today.  Congratulation to all their team!

    http://reduser.net/forum/showthread.php?t=21835&page=3

     
c
compose new post
j
next post/next comment
k
previous post/previous comment
r
reply
e
edit
o
show/hide comments
t
go to top
esc
cancel

Switch to our mobile site