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Sep 21st, 2011 by admin

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In This Canon 60d test There Is Not A Lot Of Footage And, It Took Three Storms To Make

I decided to do the test on the awesome 60d. Observe how this time lapse naturally becomes darker and darker, the darkness engulfing the venerable houses. This is not really a Canon 60d test, as much as it is successful footage for my new zombie movie, which I am shooting entirely on the 60d.

But let me turn the table again and call it a Canon 60d test: any time lapse is like a test, the photographer is at the mercy of the elements. What do I mean? Creating a time lapse is an uncertain art, and you never know what the result will be. Don't be discouraged, that’s the joy of it. Obviously you know what you want, but the end result has always surprised me.

The idea behind this Canon 60d test is that darkness and danger is descending upon landscape as if the zombie apocalypse is on it way. Soon Zombies will infest the streets.

I am showing you raw footage here. This footage came straight out of the camera. There are no fades, filters, or effects. In camera is the way I learned how to do it thirty years ago when effects were very expensive and difficult. It simply better and quicker and easier to do things in camera. Old school is sometimes the best school. The old rule says: what can be done in camera, should be done in camera. In this Canon 60d test there is not a lot of footage, and it took three storms to make. Time lapse of this nature takes a lot of patience. All it really took was getting the right manual aperture to achieve the evil atmosphere.

The quality is way below the original footage, as TouTube compresses, and does not offer full HD. Of course the end product is going to look awesome on a big screen. I want to point out the dreaded time lapse flicker. Since you don't know what you are getting, every time lapse is like a Canon 60d test. Sometimes you get flicker, sometimes you don't. But one way of reducing the annoying flicker is to use one exposure for every one second interval, this will give you the smoothest look.

The problem is the DSLR camera I think, but don’t ask me why, and also the fact that light is actually changing every second, but our eyes can not perceive these changes, when the camera can. This Canon 60d test is not bad but you will see the compression in the blacks. Later, in the fished project, I would match the colors, contrast, and brightness, and crush the blacks, but you get the idea. Use this link to Learn more about Time lapse and the Canon 60d intervalometer.

Take a look now at my Canon 60d test:

Read my scary Canon 60d review here now! and find more footage.
Be a HERO and Help STOP SOPA Now!! I'll tell you How! This video that Must Be SHARED!

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