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Shooting Motion

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Ever since the Canon 5D MKII hit the market we have played around with the idea of shooting motion on a DSLR camera.  The market has exploded with accessories and add ons for shooting DSLR video and the quality of the results have far exceeded the expectations of most.  For the first few years a lot of still photographers viewed this option as somewhat of a novelty.  However, now the stock industry has seen a shift toward motion capture along with the stills from the same location.  Our friends at Corbis have a full motion gallery available on their site now and have seen some solid results.

The idea is, once you are on location, you have your shot ready, you have the property release, why not shoot some motion of the same location and expand your sales opportunities.  With a little bit more work than what is involved in your regular still shoot you can reach a whole new audience and potential buyer base.

Here are a couple options from Erik at Corbis on ways to shoot motion when you are already on location:

Two ways, dependent on what is moving in the frame, and your level of expertise with AfterEffects/Photoshop and creating time lapse clips
 
1: “faux-time-lapse”. Use only when there’s nothing moving the frame that gives away IN THE FINAL SHOT that it’s time lapse
  • Shoot in in stills mode: RAW stills 6-10fps, whatever camera can manage. Frame for 1.78:1
  • 24 images= 1 second screen time: shoot at least 360 frames =  15 seconds)
  • Consider using Small Canon Camera RAW files: they still are plenty large for rendering to 1920×1080
  • Bring RAW stills into After Effects or Photoshop as “Image Sequence”
  • Color correct & render out to 1920×1080 ProRes / DNxHD / other filer format
PRO: benefit of RAW color correction, better latitude, 14-bit color
CON: time consuming post process
 
 
2: shoot video mode  w/ DSLR: 1920×1080 HD video, in the 8-bit H264 codec available in the camera. “Flip the switch and shoot”
  • Lens a little wider (sensor will crop down from 1.5:1 to 1.78:1)
  • Expose for best range in image
  • Cut clips down in Premiere / Photoshop / FCP / Vegas / other
PRO: fast, easy
CON: 8-bit color space, limited color correction ability. Tougher to expose right. Fewer ISO choices since you must shoot at minimum 1/48 shutter speed
 
To do EITHER way you shoot:
  • Lock off camera for one version
  • If applicable, move camera in a way that makes sense in the frame. Go with what the geometry of the shot tells you to do. Camera movement, NOT pan / tilt / zoom.
  • Shoot at eye level: makes sense for a background plate. Frame a shot of the person, then pull the person out & shoot only the BG
  • If easy and practical: record lens and tilt angle: useful for VFX

 

There are also a number of tools like sliders and fluid head tripods that can help with the process of capturing smooth motion sequences without costing a lot of additional money.

We look forward to hearing any feedback you guys have on the idea of shooting motion and of course would be happy to answer any questions you have about adding motion to your collection.

– The Spaces Team

 

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Instagram Controversy

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 UPDATE:  Shortly after the uproar surrounding this issue,  Instagram has addressed the concerns of many and are in the process of updating their terms of use.  We will continue to monitor the situation. 
Hi Spaces Fans,
 Everyone is buzzing about the new Instagram legal changes that were made over intelectual property. If they continue with their new direction you might want to consider these tips from Spaces Images photographer Will Austin. Thank you Will for taking the time to offer up such great advice. We will continue to follow this story and keep you updated with any changes. If you get a chance  please check out Will’s Blog at http://willaustin.com/category/blog/ it is full of great information and increadable photos.
Thanks,
Spaces Team

 

Today I received a flurry of messages asking about the new terms of service that Instagram just announced.  As an avid user of Instagram I am very disappointed. No online photo service, “free” or otherwise, has the right to sell my photos without my consent. So this is what I am doing –

1- Seeing the deluge of bad press today, I will give them 10 days to update their terms.

2- Today I will download all of my Instagram photos via the service “Copygram,” there are several others as well –

http://copygr.am/site/backupphotos/

3- I will only upload photos to Instagram when obligated by a special project.

4- I will start using three other services today – Snapseed (Google+), EyeEm and Flickr.  (That thundering sound on the internet today is millions of people swithching to the new Flickr App)

5- If Instagram hasn’t come around by the first of the year I will cancel my account and start a new “dummy” account which I may or may not use.

6- I will notify all my good friends on Instagram of my new home(s) at Google+ Flickr and EyeEm.

More on the issue here-

http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-57559710-38/instagram-says-it-now-has-the-right-to-sell-your-photos/

Cheers,
Will Austin

Will Austin - Another take from a person who is quitting Instagram and Facebook, via the New York Times Bits blog-

http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/12/31/126113/

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