Wednesday, 18 January 2012

Shooting for Green screen - Getting it on


The first thing you need to do is video yourself against a green screen. The screen should be even, smooth and lit to produce rich color. Here are some tips that will help produce bad credit loans excellent results:
  • Use a wrinkle-free screen (green is best for video)
  • Light screen evenly
  • Position talent at least 3 feet from screen
  • Use rim light on talent
  • minimize spill of green on talent
  • less (light) is more
Budget Setup (what you can start with):
  • Green Screen Paper  or flex screen
  • Two work lights with 600 watt bulbs
  • Diffusion material (Tough Spun)
  • Single chip DV camera
The idea here is that the talent lighting will illuminate unsecured loans the background enough to pull a key. I've done it, it works, it's inexpensive. The diffusion is critical to minimize the shadows on the background and soften the light on the talent.
Optimum Setup (what I use):
  • Screen by eefx.com
  • 3 Chip DV Camera (Sony PD-150 or similar)
  • Lights by Pacific Coast Lighting Systems for talent key and fill
  • Lights by Home Depot (HD) for screen (daylight fluorescence)
  • Lowel ViP-Light for rim light
  • VIDEO: My Portable Set Up

 
The rim light should be placed high and angled down on to the talent. This adds a slight rim of light that helps when you go to key and also when compositing.
Key and Fill light are film terms. Key refers to the main light and fill, well that "fills in the other side. Why not have two lights or one and light head on? Well the talent looks best when there is some 'modeling' or 'shape' to the face. Ideally, you want a nice round look and not a flat look that comes with one main light or two lights of equal strength. 

Monday, 16 January 2012

GPS Tagging with your camera

Have you ever taken a photo and forgotten where you took it?
If you take lots of photos like me, sometimes places (and their photographs) run together.  There is a new way to marry photos and the GPS position where you took the photo.  Once you have these two (the photo and the GPS coordinates) in the same image file, you can use software that displays both your photo and a map of where unsecured loans it was taken.  This marrying of technology is called “geotagging photographs”.
When you “geotag” photos, you are adding the latitude, longitude, and altitude information into the image file.  It adds the data into something called the EXIF (exchangeable image file format) area of the image file.  You could enter the information in manually (using special software) after you upload the photos to your computer, but that’s way too much work for me.
Recent innovations add the GPS receiver right in the camera.  This does two things, it provides GPS locations for photos and automatically adds the data into the EXIF area (which saves quite a bad credit loans bit of headache).
Nikon has been the leader in creating cameras with the GPS receiver built in.  Cameras such as the Nikon Coolpix P6000 13.5MP Digital Camera automatically add the geo-tagging information to photos without added work.

Nikon P6000 Geotagging CameraNikon P6000 Geotagging Camera
Other cameras new to the market such as the Samsung  CL65 (ST1000 in Europe / Australia) camera have with WiFi, Bluetooth and GPS.  This technology looks to rival Nikon’s P6000.
Samsung CL65 (ST1000 in Europe / Australia)Samsung CL65 (ST1000 in Europe / Australia)
There’s also a new twist on geotagging, the use of cell phone cameras with built in GPS units.  Some phones such as the iPhone and some Blackberry models already have this feature.  At the moment, you need a special application (app) that inserts the GPS coordinates into image file.
There is one more twist that just arrived, geotagging videos.  Some high end Sony camcorders have started geotagging videos including the Sony HDR-TG5V High Definition Handycam Camcorder with Built-in GPS Receiver and the Sony HDR-XR500V 120GB HDD High Definition Camcorder with Built-in GPS Receiver.
Sony HDR-TG5V High Def Geo-tagging Handycam CamcorderSony HDR-TG5V High Def Geo-tagging Handycam Camcorder
Sony HDR-XR500V Camcorder with Built-in GeotaggingSony HDR-XR500V Camcorder with Built-in Geotagging
This is just another way that we can provide pinpoint locations for all of our images, whether they are still photos or videos.
As technology matures, many more cameras will have the geotagging capabilities built in.  Stay tuned to this site and I’ll be adding in information and reviews of the geotagging cameras that come on the market.

Wednesday, 11 January 2012

Tilt shift photography

Shift movements enable the photographer to shift the location of the lens's imaging circle relative to the digital camera sensor. This means that the lens's center of perspective no longer corresponds the the image's center of perspective, and produces an effect similar to only using a crop from the side of a correspondingly wider angle lens.
Tilt movements enable the photographer to tilt the plane of sharpest focus so that it no longer lies perpendicular to the lens axis. This produces a wedge-shaped depth of field whose width increases further from the camera. The tilt effect therefore does not necessarily increase depth of field—it just allows the photographer to customize its location to better suit their subject matter.

CONCEPT:LENSIMAGINGCIRCLE

The image captured at your camera's digital sensor is in fact just a central rectangular crop of the circular image being captured by your lens (the "imaging circle"). With most lenses this circle is designed to extend just beyond what is needed by the sensor. Shift lenses, by contrast, actually project a much larger imaging circle than is ordinarily required—thereby allowing the photographer to "shift" this imaging circle to selectively capture a given rectangular portion.
 Apply Shift:LeftRight
imaging circle of a regular camera lens
 
imaging circle of a tilt shift camera lens
Ordinary Camera LensLens Capable of Shift Movements
Above comparison shown for 11 mm shift movements on a 35 mm SLR camera;
actual image circles would be larger relative to the sensor for cameras with a crop factor
(see tutorial on digital camera sensor sizes for more on this topic).
Shift movements have two primary uses: they enable photographers to change perspective or expand the angle of view (using multiple images). Techniques for each are discussed in subsequent sections. The above example would be more useful for creating a panorama since the medium telephoto camera lens created a flat perspective.
The shift ability comes with an additional advantage: even when unshifted, these lenses will typically have better image quality at the edges of the frame—similar to using full frame 35 mm lenses on cameras with a crop factor. This means less softness and vignetting, with potentially less pronounced distortion.
On the other hand, a lens capable of shift movements will need to be much larger and heavier than a comparable regular lens, assuming the same focal length and maximum aperture. Extreme shift movements will also expose regions of the imaging circle with lower image quality, but this may not be any worse than what is always visible with an ordinary camera lens. Further, a 24 mm tilt shift lens is likely to be optically similar to an ordinary 16 mm lens due to a similar sized imaging circle. This means that this 24 mm tilt shift lens is therefore likely to be surpassed in optical quality by an ordinary 24 mm lens, since wider angle lenses generally have poorer optical quality.

SHIFTMOVEMENTSFORPERSPECTIVECONTROL

Shift movements are typically used for perspective control to straighten converging vertical lines in architectural photography. When the camera is aimed directly at the horizon (the vanishing point below), vertical lines which are parallel in person remain parallel in print:
Converging verticals arise whenever the camera lens (ie, center of the imaging circle) is aimed away from the horizon. The trick with a shifted lens is that it can capture an image which lies primarily above or below the horizon—even though the center of the imaging circle still lies on or near the horizon. This effect changes the  unsecured  loans perspective.
 
Ordinary LensLens Shifted for
Perspective Control
The shifted lens gives the architecture much more of a sense of prominence and makes it appear more towering—as it does in person. This can be a very useful effect for situations where one cannot get sufficiently far from a building to give it this perspective (such as would be the case when photographing buildings from the side of a narrow street).
Note that in the above example the vanishing point of perspective was not placed directly on the horizon, and therefore vertical lines are not perfectly parallel (although much more so than with the ordinary lens). Often times a slight bit of convergence is desirable, since perfectly parallel vertical lines can sometimes look overdone and unrealistic.
A similar perspective effect could be achieved using an ordinary lens and digital techniques. One way would be to use a wider angle lens and then only make a print of a cropped portion of this, although this would sacrifice a substantial portion of the camera's megapixels.
A second way would be to stretch the image from the ordinary lens above using photoshop's perspective control (so that it is shaped like an upside down trapezoid).
The second method would retain more resolution, but would yield an image whose horizontal bad credit loans resolution progressively decreases toward the top. Either way, the shifted lens generally yields the best quality.
Technical Note: it is often asked whether digital perspective control achieves similar quality results as a shifted lens. Although the above digital techniques clearly sacrifice resolution, the question is whether this is necessarily any worse than the softening caused by using the edge of the imaging circle for an optically poor tilt shift lens. In my experience, using a shifted lens is visibly better when using Canon's 45 mm and 90 mm tilt shift lenses. Canon's 24 mm tilt shift lens is a closer call; if chromatic aberrations are properly removed I still find that the shifted lens is a little better.

SHIFTMOVEMENTSFORSEAMLESSPANORAMAS

One can create digital panoramas by using a sequence of shifted photographs. This technique has the advantage of not moving the optical center of the camera lens, which means that one can avoid having to use a panoramic head to prevent parallax error with foreground subject matter. Another potential benefit is that the final composite photo will retain the rectilinear perspective of the original lens.
Panorama of Arches National Park, Utah
The Canon and Nikon lenses can shift up to 11 mm and 11.5 mm, respectively, which describes how far the lens can physically move relative to the camera sensor (in each direction). Several common shift scenarios have been included below to give a better feel for what 11 mm of shift actually means for photos. Since each lens can rotate on its axis, this shift could be applied in two directions:
Panorama Using Horizontal Shift Movements in Landscape Orientation
 
Full Frame 35 mm Sensor
Area Increase: 60%
Aspect Ratio: 2.42:1
Sensor with 1.6X Crop Factor
Area Increase: 100%
Aspect Ratio: 3:1

Wide Angle Using Horizontal Shift Movements in Portrait Orientation
 
Full Frame 35 mm Sensor
Area Increase: 90%
Aspect Ratio: 1.28:1
Sensor with 1.6X Crop Factor
Area Increase: 150%
Aspect Ratio: 1.66:1
note: all diagrams shown to scale for 11 mm shift; area increases rounded to nearest 5%
Note how cropped sensors have more to gain from shifting than full frame sensors. For panoramas, one can achieve dramatically wide aspect ratios of 2:1 and 3:1 for full frame and cropped sensors, respectively, with substantially more resolution. Many more combinations of camera orientation, shift direction and sensor size can be explored using the calculator in the next section.
Shift can also be used in other directions than just up-down or left-right. The example below illustrates all combinations of shift in 30° increments for a 35 mm full frame sensor in landscape orientation:

Move your mouse over the image to see frame outlines for each shift combination.
Megapixels of above image increased by 3X compared to a single photo; if 1.6X CF this would be 5X.
Once captured, the stitching process is more straightforward since each photograph does not have to be corrected for perspective and lens distortion, and lens vignetting will not be uneven between images. Photoshop or another basic image editing program could therefore be used to layer the images and align manually. Make sure to use manual or fixed exposure since vignetting can cause the camera to expose the shifted photos more than the unshifted photo—even if the photos are exposed using a small aperture. This occurs because the camera's through the lens (TTL) metering is based on measurements with the lens wide open (smallest f-number), not the aperture used for exposure.
Alternatively, one could use photo stitching software on a series of shifted photographs to create a perspective control panorama. Such a panorama would require the lens to be shifted either up or down, and remain in that position for each camera angle comprising the panorama.

Monday, 9 January 2012

Pandas make themselves at home and signs of breeding :)

Edinburgh recently gave a warm welcome to two very special new residents. Tian Tian and Yang Guang, the first giant pandas to live in the UK for 17 years will be calling Edinburgh Zoo home for the foreseeable future.
Since their arrival on the 4th December, the pair are said unsecured loans to be settling in well. The male, Yang Guang is the more outgoing of the two but both are easy-going and like to eat and sleep a lot. They will live in separate enclosures as pandas are solitary animals but when Tian Tian comes into season early next year, the pair will be introduced to each other in the hope that they will produce baby cubs.
Having been given 10 days to recover from their long journey before going on show to the public, the magnificent duo are now ready to be shown. The first 600 visitors bad credit loans have already pre-booked their tickets and will get a 30 minute slot to enjoy the special occasion. Already the zoo has seen a 200% rise on usual numbers for this time of year.
These figures are much welcomed as Tian Tian and Yang Guang haven’t come cheap. On top of the £250,000 spent on the enclosures and the annual £600,000 cost of loaning the bears, they will get through 30 kilos of bamboo every day which equates to £70,000 a year.
It appears as though the zoo has nothing to worry about though as everyone is keen to catch a glimpse of the rare and intriguing bears. It is predicted that visitor numbers will double in the first year which is not only great news for the zoo, but Edinburgh as a whole as this will undoubtedly increase tourism and boost the Scottish economy.