Nikon R10 follow focus...
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- sooper8fan
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Nikon R10 follow focus...
Etimh just linked me to this over at cinematography.com....looks awesome! thanks for the link, tim.
http://www.cinematography.com/forum2004 ... opic=11999
http://www.cinematography.com/forum2004 ... opic=11999
photo site: http://www.zelophoto.com
photo blog: http://www.zelophotoblog.com
photo blog: http://www.zelophotoblog.com
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Yep. R10 has a "long rotate" to get from one end of focus to the other, so on this cam in particular, especially if the gearing can be changed, FF would be a huge advantage. Often wished I had it whilst shooting our little feature; one simply can't twist one's hand around far enough without stopping midway.mattias wrote:it's still nice to have easier access to focus even if you don't have to pull during shooting.
/matt
An awesome gizmo.
Mitch
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second that. the elmo 1012 n 612 sxls do have an focus free lock that ranges from about 6 to 30mm zoom range and within that range you may need to concentrate on the image composition only. cant fail on the focus. knife gem.
s8hôôt
s8hôôt
..tnx for reminding me Michael Lehnert.... or Santo or.... cinematography.com super8 - the forum of Rednex, Wannabees and Pretenders...
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One of the inherent drawbacks (sold as a feature!), of the smallest format; everything is in focus. Thus, part of the visual language of film is lost (directing the audience's attention via racking focus). To combat this, one must zoom in (well past 12mm), to regain use of critical focus. Twisting the focus ring around is problematic. I can think of lots of shots that would benefit from the ergonomic advantage provided by FF.Nigel wrote:Yep...Even at an f2.8 focused at 10 feet at 12mm you can go from 4'10" to ?
So...I'm explaining this to a "senior member"?
Given a good quality product, investment is wise/unwise according to the needs of the investor. If you shoot like dad on vacation, you probably don't need FF. If shooting a feature, you want every available advantage.Nigel wrote:The FF is totally something I should invest in.
Wrong format. Plus, while visualizing ideas, it doesn't pay to worry what passersby might think of one's gear.Nigel wrote:Good Luck
PS--I thought cars were to be an extension of manhood not cameras.
Mitch
- Nigel
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The reason I used 12mm is because that is the Normal focal length for S8.
WHen I can get to my DOF charts for S8 I will write more...Even at the long lengths you still have a ton of depth.
You are right it is a drawback often sold as a benefit.
But I don't see how a FF set up is going to help with S8 other than make you think that you are cool. All because you put some rods, Mattebox and a FF on a super8 camera.
Good Luck
WHen I can get to my DOF charts for S8 I will write more...Even at the long lengths you still have a ton of depth.
You are right it is a drawback often sold as a benefit.
But I don't see how a FF set up is going to help with S8 other than make you think that you are cool. All because you put some rods, Mattebox and a FF on a super8 camera.
Good Luck
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Actually, you do need to do focus pulls somewhat regularly with S8 if you frequently shoot with the lens at around 50-60mm as I do. In a recent project a character walked from 70 feet away to about 15. Having that FF unit would have been useful, but obviously it's pretty expensive for most uses.
Production Notes
http://plaza.ufl.edu/ekubota/film.html
http://plaza.ufl.edu/ekubota/film.html
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R10 zooms to 80mm. "Difference" = not only interest, but life itself. Normal is okay too...Nigel wrote:The reason I used 12mm is because that is the Normal focal length for S8.
This hasn't been my experience, even to the point of mucking the focus on long shots. Took me a while to notice that the split-screen on my R10 had to be "off to the left on the bottom half", as opposed to aligned.Nigel wrote:WHen I can get to my DOF charts for S8 I will write more...Even at the long lengths you still have a ton of depth.
Specialized gear is for special situations; I'd rather be able to say, "yes, we can do that", than, "Ohhh, that's gonna be tricky".
Not seeing the benefit is a thin reason to jump in and mock those who do. Ridiculing people for perceived weakness says more about the ridiculer than the ridiculee.Nigel wrote:You are right it is a drawback often sold as a benefit.
But I don't see how a FF set up is going to help with S8 other than make you think that you are cool. All because you put some rods, Mattebox and a FF on a super8 camera.
Good Luck
Rods/mattebox can be used to mount lots of cool stuff for solid screen value. I have an old mechanical iris from an enlarger which looks way better than the digital version. Lens elements, filters, glasses of water...the idea is opening up the possibilities.
Read the thread linked at top of page. The unit was $60.00, and looks solid as a rock. FF can be removed, and it looks like it has a *lock*, so you can set your points and hit them while concentrating on composition if you're a one-man-band.
Gear is ideas made concrete. The benefit of good gear is on-screen. Looking cool is a side benefit. Plus, in a professional environment, don't under-estimate the value of showing up with tools that say "serious". Especially if you're the Super 8 guy.
Cheers,
Mitch
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Over the years Ive collected up a half dozen compendium shades and stick them on the front of about everything. I dont know about looking cool but I like to be able to crank my shade right to the edge of the frame when need be. I may be crazy but I think Im getting better color saturation both with film as well as analog and digital video.
Maybe they do look cool because now that I think about it it seems like all the women who have looked at my different cameras on a shoot lately want to run their fingers over the pleats in the shades, and purr. Interesting.
Maybe they do look cool because now that I think about it it seems like all the women who have looked at my different cameras on a shoot lately want to run their fingers over the pleats in the shades, and purr. Interesting.