The eternal question: how important is the equipment when you tell a story? When I was in the fledgling stages of photojournalism I would blame my equipment alot. If I only had this lens, or that camera body, or a certain tripod or whatever, I would be able to create photos like the big guys. As I left full time photojournalism to live a more balanced life, I found myself drifting back to storytelling. Several years later here I am: a budding filmmaker/storyteller/content creator at the Univeristy of Washington. Now that my aim is film, that eternal question comes up again: how important is equipment? As you can tell, my class has been using the diminutive Flip Video camera. And just like the constraints that Lars von Trier created in 1995 with ‘Dogme 95’ to make film more creative and real, I am finding the constraints of the Flip Video cmaera have made me a better film maker. Because I have limited technical choices I am forced to concentrate on using what I already have in the most creative way possible. Yesterday I set out to film the exact same mini-film using a Canon XH-A1 and a Flip Video camera. I actually taped the Flip Video to the side of the Canon XH A1 to nsure that each shot was exactly the same. Both sets of identical footage were editied exactly the same way: down to the frame! I wanted no bias in this test. Both cameras were set to auto everything (Flip Video is always this way!) and only minimal color correction was applied in Final Cut Pro to make them …
Video Rating: 4 / 5
Take black and white photos with your digital camera. Learn how to use the monochrome mode of theCanon EOS 40D Digital SLR camera in this free Canon photography lesson. Expert: Ryan Vaughn Bio: Ryan Vaughn is a photo enthusiast who has used his expertise for professional wedding portraits and business promotion. Filmmaker: MAKE | MEDIA
Video Rating: 4 / 5