Cinema effect is almost wholly based on the art and technique of "Aspect Ratio"....and stretching the film frame to give it that look. A good dslr camera to buy for a close proximity to it is one that offers a "full frame" option.
This is ridiculous. It doesn't even darken the image, the camera/camcorder will simply assume it's a darker scene and increase its exposure. With that said, ALL you're accomplishing is a hazy video. If any light hits the stretched fabric, it will show as a large colored blob, as seen in the top left at 0:17 .
This was NOT a refined test by any way but its the old school notion, worth testing that when ever possible now and in the old days, filtered CAPTURE, lighting and the physical set is often (in my opinion USUALLY)-critical for deeper & magical projects. I wait on any "colour correction" or D.V. passes until the end. Modern-Masterpeices are suffering from saturating of digital blasts and cyber filters. Black/nWhite lighting beats the hell out of dragging a SATURATION tab to the left!
you can creat an film-look with 35mm adapters or just to set your camera correct, but not with nylon.... ah, total no-go to strecht nylon over the lens.....
Hey i wanted to ask you something, since yo know about this, cause i like making videos.
What makes a movie or a videoclip look like,how can i say this... a movie, 'cause you notice the difference between a home camera and a cinema camera, i mean is the lens that makes that effect that you're on a movie or its the camera itself, and if it's the lens can you make a regular camera shoot look like a movie with a different lens.
I'm still learning about lighting settings and exposure settings that give a film look. But stretching and I mean STRETCHING to the point of breaking a black or earth-brown piece of nylon stocking and secured with rubber band with a "wide angle" lens is the fastest and cheapest way to get a "film" look to the video image. This example was too short and would have served better with outdoor shots too! I just tossed it in and this is wide angle and brown colored stocking only.
@perroxido20 Hey, I can fill you in on this one. Its all about how the light is captured from the set. In home cameras, they use a digital microchip that measures the wavelength of light so its not accurate. In Cinema this use film, its an actual exposure and functions more like the way our eyes work.
WOOOW amazing!!! i dont see any changes!! awesome!
MrAllenDP 9 months ago
Cinema effect is almost wholly based on the art and technique of "Aspect Ratio"....and stretching the film frame to give it that look. A good dslr camera to buy for a close proximity to it is one that offers a "full frame" option.
torchidman 11 months ago
gey
TomReeseqazwsx 1 year ago
This is ridiculous. It doesn't even darken the image, the camera/camcorder will simply assume it's a darker scene and increase its exposure. With that said, ALL you're accomplishing is a hazy video. If any light hits the stretched fabric, it will show as a large colored blob, as seen in the top left at 0:17 .
ownage65 1 year ago
@ownage65 Who doesn't know about this? It's supposed to soften the image.
TVwriter23 1 year ago
you might aswell change the colour correction stuff when u edit it, thats a terible idea, who actually agrres with me on this one
95bradders95 2 years ago
This was NOT a refined test by any way but its the old school notion, worth testing that when ever possible now and in the old days, filtered CAPTURE, lighting and the physical set is often (in my opinion USUALLY)-critical for deeper & magical projects. I wait on any "colour correction" or D.V. passes until the end. Modern-Masterpeices are suffering from saturating of digital blasts and cyber filters. Black/nWhite lighting beats the hell out of dragging a SATURATION tab to the left!
SOGGYmilktoast 2 years ago
im confused..
akanathan 2 years ago
that picture at the beginning freaked me out
CITGProductions 2 years ago
what an horrible idea....
you can creat an film-look with 35mm adapters or just to set your camera correct, but not with nylon.... ah, total no-go to strecht nylon over the lens.....
Williampentium133 2 years ago
That looks fricken awful...
Tips for film look.
get a set of sticks, shoot everything on sticks, film and TV camera ops don't go running around haphazardly shooting shakey stuff.
Shot composition, think about framing the best shots and angles to tell your story.
ukcameraman 2 years ago
the nylon def darkens and stuff
but it makes it look hazy ish
and almost under contrasted or saturated in a form
almostfamousshow 2 years ago
I have TWO Emmy's.. do you?
pathofworst 3 years ago
Nope, just used stockings and a lot of other problems!
SOGGYmilktoast 3 years ago
Hey i wanted to ask you something, since yo know about this, cause i like making videos.
What makes a movie or a videoclip look like,how can i say this... a movie, 'cause you notice the difference between a home camera and a cinema camera, i mean is the lens that makes that effect that you're on a movie or its the camera itself, and if it's the lens can you make a regular camera shoot look like a movie with a different lens.
and what kind of nylon are you talking about
thank you
perroxido20 4 years ago
I'm still learning about lighting settings and exposure settings that give a film look. But stretching and I mean STRETCHING to the point of breaking a black or earth-brown piece of nylon stocking and secured with rubber band with a "wide angle" lens is the fastest and cheapest way to get a "film" look to the video image. This example was too short and would have served better with outdoor shots too! I just tossed it in and this is wide angle and brown colored stocking only.
SOGGYmilktoast 3 years ago
@perroxido20 Hey, I can fill you in on this one. Its all about how the light is captured from the set. In home cameras, they use a digital microchip that measures the wavelength of light so its not accurate. In Cinema this use film, its an actual exposure and functions more like the way our eyes work.
Buddyb309 1 year ago