Wednesday 19 January 2011

SONY HDR - Panning - zoom - Focus.



We went out with the video camera and performed some of the basic techniques used in filming and media
which are Panning, Zoom and Focus.

Panning - Panning while filming is a term used for horizontal shifting of the shot, we performed this technique in the first 10 or 15 seconds of the video shifting from the left of our view to the right.

Zoom - Zooming in a film is to close in on your object or surrounding, simply described as a close up, but this can always disrupt the focus, we see a zoom in our video when the goose goes to the toilet, which will be subtlety evident.

Focus - Focus is the main point of attraction in a film or image that the light becomes clear and the rest of the image around the main point of focus blurs. 

Me and my group went down to the Andresey river bank in Burton because we felt that it had the best scenery in Burton town center, when we got there we found ourselves with a lot of wildlife to work with, mainly geese, unfortunately our footage never really stretched any further than that area itself but we explored all the relevant techniques.

Wednesday 12 January 2011

CISCO flip Ultra HD

The Flip camera is a nice handy little piece of equipment and is ideal for family filming and capturing memories, but I wouldn't use it for professional purposes as it is quite difficult to keep steady, but negatives aside for such a small gadget it does a big expensive gadgets job in an affordable and working class fashion, I personally have tried one of these out of my brothers as it appears to have been a very big hit for a christmas present at only 100 pounds, it's the new generation of video cameras for families and very ideal for catching memories and watching your kids grow etc. It also looks ideal for a crowded place of quick capturing for a journalist or paparazzi, rather than sound recording. After looking at footage, the still picture looks rather sharp and in focus but like I say it looks very hard to keep steady which seems to unfocus and make the HD picture look a bit shabby.

SONY HDR-FX1



The SONY HDR FX1 is a beautiful piece of kit, and by the looks of thing it's very easy to handle, we will get a chance to go out with one of these next week, so the blog will be updated with my thoughts and the picture and ease of use, and maybe then followed by some edited filming we may have done, but looking at some footage on youtube, so quality looks beautiful.. like television standard quality even so it's not the biggest of cameras by any stretch of the imagination, to give time for the camera to pan, we were told that it's always a good idea to keep the camera still for 10 seconds before moving it, doing the same left and right. I found a video on youtube that demonstrates this really well so I shall post this below.

The HDR-FX1 includes a 3.5 inch. 16:9 aspect ratio diagonal high resolution LCD screen, featuring 250,000 pixels. The LCD features Sony's technology for best viewing in bright light. The LCD on the HDR-FX1 has been positioned towards the front of the handle, a unique position that breaks away from the typical left-side positioning. The LCD screen unfolds to reveal the HDR-FX1's VCR controls. The HDR-FX1 also includes a high resolution color viewfinder, also featuring 250,000 pixels. As a camcorder the HDR-FX1's main audience will almost certainly be very high-end consumers and professionals who seek the highest levels of manual control. The HDR-FX1 includes more manual control and "real button" control than any other Sony consumer camcorder in recent history, including the DCR-VX2100.