Posts Tagged ‘Digital cameras South Africa’

Directing the actors

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010 by admin
Directing the Actors

Directing the Actors

Now that you’ve bought your new video camera and you are ready to venture into the vast world of movie making you will need to know how to direct the actors. Directing actors is a strange process as you expect so much from them and yet you do not know them as people, at least not in the beginning.  It is imperative to meet them one on one as soon as possible in order to feel comfortable around each other.  Start by telling each other the truth and beginning the process of explaining the subtext, and fitting the uniqueness of the actor into the character.  A lot of work is needed, even for very little dialogue, but the care of every detail is the essence of filmmaking.  By concentrating on getting the mind of the actor focused, and getting the best of every line is the start of potentially good work.

Read the rest of this entry »

Cameras, Formats, Photographers and Printing

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009 by admin
Josef Sudek

Josef Sudek

The camera is now as common placed as the pen. It is no longer a privileged object. It is a tool that anyone can use to document or to express. It is a tool of personal interpretation that is guided by the choice of format. Clear distinctions in a photographer’s visual style can be seen depending on whether they use a large or smaller format camera. The diversity of styles proves the medium is not limited to one method or ideology; however, it is limited by format. The complex relationship with the arts depends on the interpretation of the viewer, whether it is art or photography. An individual presents a photo

that is interpreted by another individual. The format plays a decisive role in the visual cues that the person looking at the photo picks up. The camera and lenses used by a photographer help to define their own unique style. The choice of the camera will lead to constraints and freedoms depending on the equipment chosen; and more importantly, affect the actual visual style and interpretation. A photographer usually experiments with most formats until they find one that is comfortable to what they want to achieve. Once this decision is made, usually later in their life, they remain with that format in the attempt to master it. The format can achieve, in a handheld camera, Bresson’s ‘decisive moment’ of a man jumping a puddle; or in a large box camera, the detailed glass plate studies of a garden through a frosted window by Sudek.

Read the rest of this entry »