@theunknown2142 It's my understanding that the line up high is better for bigger airtime, but in chop like this day it pulls the line as the boat goes over the chop, and the rider has to be ready to compensate those pulls. Towing from the stern may have been a better option but the line was already attached up high and I just wanted to snag some slow-mo of my buddy on the Sky-Ski.
This footage looks incredible, awesome shots. Can I ask if you remember what the scene file you used was? I haven't been able to get all the noise out of the video like you did!
@BurkePushman Yeah, well there are some things I'm sure you already know about:
-Set gain to Low
-Use lowest ND filter for light conditions (when the shutter was at 1/250th, and shooting at 60fps - my ND filter was either at 1/8 or off in this light)
-Set Iris to manual and adjust for conditions then keep it there
-I usually shoot outdoor footage on preset scene Cine-V, which I believe is F5 on the dial.
@adammarcusmoore That actually does help haha, my exterior shots are looking a lot better now, I've been ignoring the cameras recommendation on an ND and adjusting the iris accordingly instead. I appreciate the help! Not to mention I'm impressed you remembered all that haha! Thanks again man!
Do you have to have the line attached up high like that for it to work properly, or will it still work with the line attached lower?
theunknown2142 2 months ago
@theunknown2142 It's my understanding that the line up high is better for bigger airtime, but in chop like this day it pulls the line as the boat goes over the chop, and the rider has to be ready to compensate those pulls. Towing from the stern may have been a better option but the line was already attached up high and I just wanted to snag some slow-mo of my buddy on the Sky-Ski.
adammarcusmoore 1 month ago
This footage looks incredible, awesome shots. Can I ask if you remember what the scene file you used was? I haven't been able to get all the noise out of the video like you did!
BurkePushman 1 year ago
@BurkePushman Yeah, well there are some things I'm sure you already know about:
-Set gain to Low
-Use lowest ND filter for light conditions (when the shutter was at 1/250th, and shooting at 60fps - my ND filter was either at 1/8 or off in this light)
-Set Iris to manual and adjust for conditions then keep it there
-I usually shoot outdoor footage on preset scene Cine-V, which I believe is F5 on the dial.
Hope this helps.
adammarcusmoore 1 year ago
@adammarcusmoore That actually does help haha, my exterior shots are looking a lot better now, I've been ignoring the cameras recommendation on an ND and adjusting the iris accordingly instead. I appreciate the help! Not to mention I'm impressed you remembered all that haha! Thanks again man!
BurkePushman 1 year ago
air chair'in kicks ass
socalfortune 1 year ago
Nice vid!!! I like the effect of the high FPS/ shutter.
that is some serious equipment you got there. You running FCP?
torx82 2 years ago
that is pretty cool
Douglas046 2 years ago