ChungMedia

BIRTV 2011 – Konova Spaceship motorised table dolly and sliders

By Dan Chung and Sarah Li

Konova are a South Korean company that make a camera slider and skater dolly often found on Amazon and other places online. At this year’s BIRTV show they were showing a motorised skater dolly strangely named the Spaceship. It is designed for table top videography and uses a controller connected to the dolly to program moves. Interestingly it can also has a timelapse mode which would give some really interesting shooting options.

Also on show as a motor control upgrade to their existing slider. It does regular motorised moves and also timelapse. The one thing that struck me immediately was the exposed drive belt – one has to wonder how well that would live up to real world production.

Posted on August 27th, 2011 by Dan Chung | Category: SIiders, Timelapse | Permalink | Comments (0)

Nathan Mauger shoots captivating timelapse of Beijing on a Canon Eos7D

Nathan Mauger is a Beijing-based freelance cameraman who has shot for the likes of National Geographic, Discovery Channel, Animal Planet, BMW, Porsche, Mercedes Benz, Rolex, CNN, CNBC, ESPN, CBS, Bloomberg, Louis Vuitton and Nike.

In January 2010 I bought a Canon 7D kit solely for the purpose of shooting video. I’ve always loved doing time lapses with cameras like the Panasonic Varicam and Sony PDW-700, and was anxious to try DSLR time lapses with longer exposures and higher resolution.

“Too Fast, Too Much” from Nathan Mauger on Vimeo.

Here in Beijing we have no sky, only heavy pollution, so there are few opportunities for time lapses of clouds, sunrises or sunsets. (The pollution is so bad that most attempts at a sunset time lapse would turn out looking like a simple fade-to-black.) The traffic is horrible, but great for time lapses.

So in July I started doing traffic time lapses at night for fun. I didn’t know what the project would look like when finished, but I knew it had to be fast, loud and violent. After a week of shooting I had to stop for over a month because of pollution. I finished in late September; a total of fifteen nights shooting.

I have a pretty big video-DSLR kit, but for this project the equipment was very simple: a Canon 7D, Sachtler FSB-8 tripod and a Canon intervalometer. As for lenses, 95% of the video was done with a Canon 70-200mm f/2.8L USM IS II, Tokina 10-17mm fisheye, and a Canon 2x extender. A couple of shots were done with the Canon 50mm f/1.2L. Fast lenses were NOT needed; apertures were usually between f16 and f22. And I always leave the image stabilizer off.

Another important piece of equipment was an iPod. When alone and filming on the street with a tripod-mounted DSLR I’ve found there’s always at least one stupid motherf*****r who comes up and puts his eye up to the viewfinder and jiggle the camera and ruining the time lapse. Normally you need to make a physical intervention. But with earphones on, for some reason these guys magically stay away. Don’t ask me why.

Next up I had to determine which shutter speeds to use. A few of the early time lapses were at four seconds, then I settled on 3.2 seconds with a four-second interval after the first couple days. On Beijing’s Sanlitun intersection time lapses it would have been better to use a four-second shutter with a longer interval (the traffic there moves damn slowly). I sped those shots up in Final Cut Pro, but longer exposures would have been better.

Exposure for traffic time lapses is important and I wish I had good advice here, but the truth is with each clip the color grading is so extreme that even shots I completely screwed up exposure-wise turned out basically ok. One key point however is to expose off of the taillights. Overexpose and they blow out towards the center and the tracers become white, yellow and red; just right exposure they’ll retain the redness without blowing out. When time lapsing cars come head-on at an angle in a medium shot you have to compromise between having the headlights massively blow out or having everything else be way too underexposed. Unwisely, I usually went the way too underexposed route and it shows, but now I know better.

In post I had a pretty good archiving system. First I would separate all the photo sequences into folders, then use Quicktime Pro to output a ProRes HQ version. (There are tutorials everywhere on the net on how to do this, so no need to rehash it here.) This makes a monstrous 5148×3456 clip. It’s so big it can’t really be played on a normal computer. From this, I created 1920×1080 clips exported from Final Cut Pro, but I always kept the original 5k clip too (maybe it will be useful in several years when we all have 4k TV’s). In FCP you can zoom in a little and move the picture vertically to fit it into a 1080p timeline. Keeping the original 5k file also gives you options for the future if you want to reframe a clip. Then after everything was processed and downconverted I would throw out the original photos. Knowing next to nothing about photography, I just shot JPEG’s, not RAW. (What does “knowing next to nothing” mean? It means I had to look up “ISO” on Wikipedia!)

Early on, I tried putting the big 5K clips into a 1080P timeline and adding some color filters and then rendering. Bad idea — this crashes FCP 7.0 every time. I found the best way is to import the 5k clip; put it into a 1080P timeline, rescale to 37.5%, and reframe. I then export with current settings, without sound but with compression markers, and with the recompress all frames box clicked.

Everything at night in Beijing except bus stops is lit with unflattering sodium vapor lights, so all or almost all clips have the FCP Color Corrector 3-Way on them to combat this. Color grading was radical. Most of the clips have the Magic Bullet Look Suite Max Contrast filter on, with post-contrast and saturation both at about +30 to +60 and pre-gamma at around +15. If you’re familiar with Looks Suite then you know how screwed up this is!

Titles were done in Apple Motion with a simple image mask and a basic motion zoom in/out.

Compressing this video for the web didn’t turn out too well. With the picture changing so fast, the compressions I did turned out very blocky, and with reduced dynamic range and detail.

Affordable Shoulder Rig

Posted on December 28th, 2010 by Nathan Mauger | Category: Canon Eos7D, Timelapse | Permalink | Comments (2)

Philip Bloom talks us through his Kesslercrane signature series Pocket Dolly

Kesslercrane Philip Bloom signature Pocketdolly from Dan Chung on Vimeo.

Philip Bloom needs little introduction so when Kesslercrane came out with his signature edition Pocketdolly I was naturally curious. Like quite a few other news shooters on this site I use a Pocket Dolly V2 for a lot of my videos and I love it. I wanted to see just how Phil had improved it further. We managed to catch up with the man himself a while back at the Canon Pro Solutions show in London and get the low down. Many thanks to Sam Morgan Moore for shooting the video for dslrnewsshooter.com while I was busy accidentally spilling coffee on Phil’s Pocket Dolly.

2 nights in Mallory Square from Philip Bloom on Vimeo.

Below is my most recent example of my own work with a Pocket Dolly V2 from North Korea.

North Korea’s Military parade in Slow Motion from Dan Chung on Vimeo.

And somewhere in this video by Sam is me spilling coffee on Phil’s Dolly.

The Smoke from Sam Morgan Moore on Vimeo.

Affordable Shoulder Rig

Posted on December 7th, 2010 by Dan Chung | Category: Canon Eos5DmkII, Timelapse | Permalink | Comments (0)

Kessler Crane ‘Philip Bloom Signature Edition’ Pocket Dolly released

Philip Bloom working his new signature edition Pocket Dolly

Kessler Crane has just launched the ‘Philip Bloom Signature Edition’ Pocket Dolly. This slider is a specially improved version of their popular Pocket Dolly V2.0 with some extra features added by Phil to make it better and more suitable for travel. Compared to a regular Pocket Dolly it has better gearing, drag control and a permanently fitted handcrank. It is available in two-foot and three-foot versions at a special launch price of $995 US, after which it will be $1095. It is also fully compatible with Kessler’s Elektra Drive and Oracle motor systems which give precise motion control in real time or for timelapse.

As cinematic journalism evolves, more and more news shooters are turning to devices like the Pocket Dolly to provide those extra-special camera moves. Phil is constantly travelling and has a background in broadcast news so he should know a thing or two about what news and documentary shooters need. I had a chance to chat to him about the dolly and this is what he told me:

“The traveller size is perfect for news shooters. You don’t need anything bigger, it fits easily in a suitcase and is nice and light.

“A slider like this will add enormous production to your shots, so simply and so easily. This slider is seriously smooth – I call it a ‘one take slider’.

“I would have killed to have had something like this when I covered news. With something like this and DSLRs, incredible shots are so easy.”

I’ve been using sliders myself for over a year now and find them invaluable. Kessler recently sent me a Pocket Dolly V2 and Elektra Drive basic controller to test out and I’m already in love with them. I used it for my latest trip to the Amazon and hopefully I’ll be able to share the results soon.

For more info about the Dolly hop over to Phil’s site here.


Affordable Shoulder Rig

Posted on October 1st, 2010 by Dan Chung | Category: Camera support systems, Timelapse | Permalink | Comments (0)

Another great 5DmkII timelapse from the Shanghai World Expo

A quick update just to say that DSLRnewsshooter.com contributor Seppe Van Grieken has posted another great timelapse video from the Shanghai World Expo – this time from the German pavillion. Seppe says this is the last in his series which he previously shared with us here.

The German Pavilion from Shanghai Expo Timelapse Machine on Vimeo.

We are always looking for interesting contributions to post here on the site. If you have news or feature video shot on DSLR that you think is worthy please feel free to email me at pressphotographer@gmail.com or message me on twitter @dslrinformer.

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Posted on July 19th, 2010 by Dan Chung | Category: Canon Eos5DmkII, Journalism, Timelapse | Permalink | Comments (0)

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