Theme Of human rights Day 2010
In This Canon 60d test You Will Be Watching Raw Footage
This test was done on the 60d. Watch as the darkness descends upon the venerable houses, the black storm of the Zombies approaching. This footage is part of my new zombie movie, so I was not really doing a Canon 60d test.
But let me turn the table again and call it a Canon 60d test: any time lapse is like a test, the photographer is at the mercy of the elements. How come? You never know what you are going to get. Its the surprise effect that I like which makes it fun. Go a head and plan the shot, in the end it will probably surprise you what you end up with.
The theme here is obvious in this Canon 60d test: the apocalypse is coming, darkness and danger is descending, swallowing everything in its path. Will the Zombie infection take root in our homes? Yes!
This is raw footage. This footage came straight out of the camera. There are no fades, filters, or effects. I learned how to do it this way thirty years ago. Putting the footage through effects generators just does not look the same as when you do the effects in camera. Its old school. The old rule says: what can be done in camera, should be done in camera. It took three storms to create this short footage in this Canon 60d test. It takes a lot of patience and time to do this kind of work. Just look at the evil atmosphere moving in over the rooftops, all it really took was getting the right manual aperture.
YouTube is great but its not full HD, and very compressed so the quality is way below the original footage. But when this project is done it will look incredible on the I the big screen. Another thing to talk about is the ugly time lapse flicker. That’s why I say every time lapse is like a Canon 60d test. Sometimes you get flicker, sometimes you don’t. If you want to get the cleanest look do it like this: use one exposure for every one second interval.
The fact that light is actually changing every second, but our eyes can not perceive these changes, when the camera can, this is one factor, but I think it has something to do with the camera too. Of course in the Canon 60d test you will notice the compression in the blacks, and later, in the fished movie, I would match the colors, contrast, and brightness, and crush the blacks a bit, but you get the idea. Here is where you can learn more about Time lapse and the Canon 60d intervalometer.
See now my Canon 60d test:
Read my scary Canon 60d review here now! and find more footage.
Lindsay – human rights defender
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