Friday, February 19, 2010

Filming With A Monopod Photography -- Indoor Advice Please?

Photography -- Indoor Advice Please? - filming with a monopod

I am a photographer with no experience in teaching myself photography. I shoot in a club ill-lit, poorly furnished by sources with different color gels. There is much movement and action themes.

I'm using a Nikon F3 HP with the aperture 2.8, exposure time 60, and I will push the double ASA. I use a monopod. Nikkor 50-mm lens with an internal filter is used.

Is the use of Kodak Portra 800 VC film better or Fujicolor Superia 1600?

Please give me your reasons.

2 comments:

screwdri... said...

You can not open and shutter speed until you know what your lighting levels to be achieved.

If your development twice as ISO rated your meter to the highest value and set the camera to open aperture priority. The device shows you the shutter speed, so that a reasonable demand. Then at least you know what is in "scene" You're

One goal faster is useful in these circumstances and usually with my 50mm F1.2 standard, average quantity of each stop.

B & W film is much more tolerant, more or less exposure color.

When you approach and prepare for something like a solid wall or on the stage itself can be shot 1/30th of a second, even slower with the practice. AnticiPants in the past is also a useful skill in these circumstances. A guitar swings his guitar aside to another is a time still in the final of the oscillation.

Try to aim for the face, especially around the eyes, the actor and acute perfect mobility device actually in the picture.

Chris

Spencer H said...

I kill the 1600s, only 1 / 60 is not really fast enough to stop not a musician, when the guitar solo.

This amount extra stop at 1 / 125, which would be useful, and that another 50 should be open 2.8

Another thing, unless you are on stage, 50 mm in width is a little something really solid in the sense of get up close ... Lenses offer more than just when you

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