Canon 5D MKii – Canon DSLR video goes RAW!!

April 2nd, 2010 by admin

Canon 5D MKII

Canon 5D MKII

April Fools Joke by Philip Bloom:

We have been hearing mutterings of this for the past few weeks. “Top DPs in Europe testing out RAW recording on Canon 5Dmkii”. It all sounded like nonsense didn’t it? Well I can exclusive reveal today as the embargo I was given 0001 BST 1/4/10 has passed that C…anon have done exactly what we wanted. RAW baby, RAW! New firmware will be released imminently for every camera from the Rebel T1i/ 500D through to the 1DmkiV giving it the much desired RAW recording on the memory cards. Not just that, but they have also finally unlocked the HDMI out to give us an uncompressed feed so we can plug in our Nanoflash or KiPro and record into a format that we have dreamed of.  View more info on the Canon 5D MKii.

Canon 550D – Here are some image quality comparisons

March 6th, 2010 by admin
Canon EOS 55D

Canon EOS 550D

BUY the CANON 550D – Click Here

Model FOVCF Sensor Pixel Size Pixels/Megapixels Viewfinder DLA*
Canon PowerShot G9 4.6x 7.6 x 5.7mm 1.9µm 4000 x 3000 12.1 - -
Canon EOS Digital Rebel XS / 1000D 1.6x 22.2 x 14.8mm 5.7µm 3888 x 2592 10.1 .81x 95% f/9.3
Canon EOS Digital Rebel T2i / 550D 1.6x 22.3 x 14.9mm 4.3µm 5184 x 3456 18.0 .87x 95% f/6.8
Canon EOS Digital Rebel T1i / 500D 1.6x 22.3 x 14.9mm 4.7µm 4752 x 3168 15.1 .87x 95% f/7.6
Canon EOS Digital Rebel XSi / 450D 1.6x 22.2 x 14.8mm 5.2µm 4272 x 2848 12.2 .87x 95% f/8.4
Canon EOS Digital Rebel XTi / 400D 1.6x 22.2 x 14.8mm 5.7µm 3888 x 2592 10.1 .80x 95% f/9.3
Canon EOS Digital Rebel XT / 350D 1.6x 22.2 x 14.8mm 6.4µm 3456 x 2304 8.0 .80x 95% f/10.4
Canon EOS 300D Digital Rebel 1.6x 22.7 x 15.1mm 7.4µm 3088 x 2056 6.3 .80x 95% f/11.8
Canon EOS 50D 1.6x 22.3 x 14.9mm 4.7µm 4752 x 3168 15.1 .95x 95% f/7.6
Canon EOS 40D 1.6x 22.2 x 14.8mm 5.7µm 3888 x 2592 10.1 .95x 95% f/9.3
Canon EOS 30D 1.6x 22.5 x 15.0mm 6.4µm 3504 x 2336 8.2 .90x 95% f/10.3
Canon EOS 20D 1.6x 22.5 x 15.0mm 6.4µm 3504 x 2336 8.2 .90x 95% f/10.3
Canon EOS 10D 1.6x 22.7 x 15.1mm 7.4µm 3088 x 2056 6.3 .88x 95% f/11.8
Canon EOS 7D 1.6x 22.3 x 14.9mm 4.3µm 5184 x 3456 18.0 1.0x 100% f/6.8
Canon EOS 5D Mark II 1.0x 36.0 x 24.0mm 6.4µm 5616 x 3744 21.1 .71x 98% f/10.3
Canon EOS 5D 1.0x 35.8 x 23.9mm 8.2µm 4368 x 2912 12.8 .71x 96% f/13.2
Canon EOS 1D Mark IV 1.3x 27.9 x 18.6mm 5.7µm 4896 x 3264 16.1 .76x 100% f/9.1
Canon EOS 1D Mark III 1.3x 28.1 x 18.7mm 7.2µm 3888 x 2592 10.1 .76x 100% f/11.4
Canon EOS 1D Mark II N 1.3x 28.7 x 19.1mm 8.2µm 3520 x 2336 8.2 .72x 100% f/12.7
Canon EOS 1D Mark II 1.3x 28.7 x 19.1mm 8.2µm 3520 x 2336 8.2 .72x 100% f/12.7
Canon EOS 1DS Mark III 1.0x 36.0 x 24.0mm 6.4µm 5632 x 3750 21.1 .76x 100% f/10.3
Canon EOS 1DS Mark II 1.0x 36.0 x 24.0mm 7.2µm 4992 x 3328 16.6 .70x 100% f/11.6


Commercial Photography – mycamera looks at Mass Communication

February 8th, 2010 by admin

The objectives of today’s blog:

1. Who are the communicators?
2. What product or service is being advertised?
3. What are the demographic and psycho graphic characteristics of the audience at which the advertisement is aimed?
4. Which needs and gratifications are addressed in the advertisement?

1. Do the Non-verbal cues in the picture contribute to the non – verbal message?

Objective:

To apply the concepts and the theories of mass communications to a media example.

Media example:

Cartier:

Mass Communication

Mass Communication

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Rehearsals prior to getting your video camera out.

January 13th, 2010 by admin

Rehearsals

Rehearsals

“To forego development prior to filming is to forego depth.”

The development of characters and building the thematic purpose lets the director and actors reach the deeper underlying meaning of the script.  By meeting with the actors and developing their characters the director guides them into his vision.  In the rehearsal stage it is key that everything is still in the development state.  New ideas and input are essential, and most importantly, the chance for the actors to bring their unique outlook on the character you have cast them for.  The director must be intuitive, looking for behaviour in the actors that resembles the behaviour he has imagined in the character.

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Directing the actors

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.

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How does main stream cinema contribute to maintaining social order?

January 9th, 2010 by admin

Silence of the Lambs

Silence of the Lambs

Characteristics of Left and Right Thinking and Ideology

It is important to realise we are a combination of both and our complexity lies in combining them with our own unique ideology.

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Film Student Bonus Topic: Italian Neorealism

January 5th, 2010 by admin
Roberto Rossellini 1906

Roberto Rossellini 1906

If manipulated in a subtle way, Neorealism transcends the barrier of reality and fantasy.   It makes stories out of real life.  The world becomes a stage set and the people its actors.  It is such a simple and complex idea – detaching yourself and looking at the world from another angle, the visualisation of seeing beauty in the normal world.  Joseph Sudek, the Czechoslovakian photographed through his studio window into the garden for decades.  Through the mist, rain, and snow, came abstract black and white photos of a pure intensity.  He accomplished the feat of seeing the extraordinary in ordinary.  The Neorealists were very similar in this way of seeing.  They reacted to what was happening around them, and dealt with it in an artistic way. They expressed, through an almost documentary style, stories of dignity.  In their realm each expressed them individually but were united in a common purpose.  “To view Italy without preconceptions and develop a more honest, ethical, but no less poetic cinematic language.” 1 It is without a doubt Visconti, Rossalini, and De Sica were key individuals in its recognition as a movement.  The moment in Italian cinema of Neorealism is considered an artistic evolution in artistic filmmaking.  “The Neorealists wanted to view their world afresh and form a new perspective, there by creating a ‘new reality’ through an artistic means.” 1

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Ideological Analysis of film-making

January 2nd, 2010 by admin
Hollywood - Capitol of Global Ideology

Hollywood - Capitol of Global Ideology

“The economics of film determines its infrastructure and therefore it’s potential.  The politics of film determines its structure:  that is, the way it relates to the world.” (Monaco)

Film is our society’s modern equivalent of story telling:  A film’s value system will reflect in the style of the movie.  When a director makes a movie it becomes a reflection of his or her political beliefs and ideology.  “Whichever way we look at it, film is a distinctly political phenomenon.” (Monaco)

While the potential of film can change society’s dominant ideology and be revolutionary; the reality is that it is a controlled political landscape of media ownership.  Who ever controls the systems of distribution and production in essence, controls the political message and the belief systems of society.  Mainstream cinemas are movies that amplify certain aspects of culture and attenuate others.

Movies are a part of Louis Althusser ideological state apparatuses, a part of the institutions that the state (linked to media ownership) uses to literally sell its ideology.  This is done through the control of screening, distribution and its links to broadcasting systems.  An example is Ted Turner’s Time/Warner which is a huge conglomerate of mass publishing, broadcasting, production and distribution of movies.  Turner, a democrat in theory, has an American political agenda that reflects the dominant ideology of American Democratic Party to a global market.  The problem lies in that this dominant culture in film is western, written, white, male, and heterosexual negating the stories (films), of minorities, woman, different cultures, gender cultures and the marginalized.  Opposition cinema today is working, but without the clout of money and politics to back it up, the films are often not distributed.

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Film Appreciation – Assumptions and contributions of semiotics

December 31st, 2009 by admin

The Thin Red Line

The Thin Red Line

After the debate of expressionism and realism the next major movement in film theory was semiotics.  Ever since the beginning of film history theorists have been fond of comparing film with verbal language.  It was only until the 50s and 60s that the real study as film as a language could proceed.  Semiotics is the study of systems of signs.  The French theorist, Christian Metz (Film language: a semiotics of the cinema 1974) used semiotics as a systematic and scientific method to analyse the ways in which film produces meaning.  This was in line with the structure list movement in linguistics and literature studies during the sixties and seventies.  All the theorists argued that film communicates according to a specific set of grammatical rules.

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Let there be light – From Chiaroscuro to Organic Lighting

December 30th, 2009 by admin
Chiaroscuro Lighting by Stanley Kubrick

Chiaroscuro Lighting by Stanley Kubrick

Good lighting is synonymous with the amount of care a filmmaker has put into his movie.  Although people are not normally visually literate in the subject – they instinctively know when something is lit correctly.  Scene two in ‘Full Metal Jacket’ contains three separate lighting types.  In the centre of the room there is the energy of high-key lighting, in the parameters the three dimensionality of Chiaroscuro, and when there is a window behind a recruit, a silhouette is formed.  The backlight of the windows is very effectively used, and the three types of lighting allows the mobility of the SC.  Kuberick has often used lighting to his advantage to make complex scenes work.  His lighting is considered very modern and clean.

Three point lighting:  The photographic principal.

  • Key light – is the principal light revealing shape.
  • Fill light – controls fall off of shadows.
  • Back light – it separates the figure from the background

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