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A few video experiments to try at home


Jay60p
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A few video experiments to try at home:

Slow motion and reverse motion:
Water drops
Remote control toys (RC cars, helicopters, etc)
Collapsing constructions of blocks, toys, dominoes, etc…
Put on a gorilla suit and hit a pile of bones with a large femur.

Stop motion animation:
Clay (Gumby, Wallace & Gromit).
Toy figures with armatures.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gg1KCyU1JEU
Lego blocks building themselves.
Drawing on paper (animate the progress of a piece of flat art)
Moving sand/small bits of stuff in patterns.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=578Xm6bgMdQ

Best to use a tripod, or a copy stand (I use an old enlarger stand),
unchanging light source, and a remote control to avoid touching
the camera.

Timelapse, (cameras with interval recording)
Such as, watch a window’s sunlight move across a room,
ice cubes melting, traffic at intersections.

I use vintage SLR lenses for stop motion & timelapse
since the apertures and focus
cannot be inadvertently changed by the camera.
To get the classic slow shutter blur for fast moving objects
I put two polarizers on the lens and rotate one to darken the
image to the point where I can use one second exposures.
Variable neutral density filters should do the same thing.

(Fuji owners: 1)My Fuji camera kit lens will stop down at each frame
and then open up again until the next frame. There is a small
difference in the actual aperture that is set each time which can
result in a small amount of flicker. Manual lenses with adapters
avoid this.
2) One thing that can make my X-T3 skip a frame is setting the
viewfinder to come on only when you put your eye to it.
I thought I could save battery power by having LCD & EVF off until
I put my eye to the viewfinder, but I found frames were being skipped
about as often as I looked through the EVF, so I think making the
EVF turn on can interrupt the interval recording.)

 

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I have a 10 year old werewolf horror film that's absolutely horrible.  Always wanted to re-edit it.  

I've also always wanted to create some stop-motion for it, or something similar to make the film more campy and silly than it already is.  I wonder if I could make 3D CGI to look like Harryhausen character animation?  Any advice from anyone that dabbles in that realm?  Seems like with all the apps out there right now it might not be too difficult.

BTW, I actually tried to do old-school stop motion, went as far as creating a foam werewolf with bendable armature and shot scenes with it, but it looked too trashy and lousy to be campy, if that makes sense. 

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But don’t do this...

I offered to film my wife doing a short (3 minutes) introduction to her immunology lecture next week (all lectures are currently online). Easy - a green screen and I had some serology testing footage for the background. Filmed it. Packed everything away. Opened Resolve... she was wearing a top with green stripes... 

Just finished take two...

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High-speed photography is a fun and easy experiment. A few years ago I took photos in a dark room, in which within a long exposure (say 2 seconds) the camera flash towards a very short exposure (1sec / 35,000). Everything with cheap and homemade materials (based on arduino). In the end I achieved my purpose of stopping a bullet in the air.

 

Adobe_20200326_213529.jpg

Adobe_20200326_213659.jpg

(Both balloons are in the first moment of their explosion)

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I did some flash triggering of things dropping into a water tank some years ago. Candles work pretty well for that.
Had optic trigger and an old HP signal/trigger generator to adjust timing. Camera was Hasselblad something with digital back.

And before you consider doing it in the living room let me tell you that bathroom is the better alternative.

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On 3/26/2020 at 11:49 AM, Jay60p said:

Stop motion animation:
Clay (Gumby, Wallace & Gromit).
Toy figures with armatures.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gg1KCyU1JEU
Lego blocks building themselves.
Drawing on paper (animate the progress of a piece of flat art)
Moving sand/small bits of stuff in patterns.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=578Xm6bgMdQ

 

 

OOPS! I grabbed these examples to fast, these Jan Svankmajer animations are too dark for inspiring

animations with the kids at home!

These are better:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8FAt7ze-QLQ

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2BwUh7nbkyU

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qtpRMsDuH74

and one of my favorites, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hzvqmoPu2H4

As for clay, just grab a big lump and start twisting it into random shapes and see what happens!

 

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