View Full Version : Musk Ox - Part V
Per Johan Naesje November 13th, 2006, 11:47 AM Hello all,
it's winter at Dovrefjell, Norway. The Muskoxen seem to enjoy the falling temperature and snow. Hopefully the video show you some of the beauty but also the extreme conditions.
The low temperature and high wind result in temperature well below -20 degrees Celsius. The camcorder and my fingers was operating very well under this conditions :-)
Link: http://www.video-film.no/snutter/muskox5.html
Mac users: http://www.video-film.no/snutter/muskox5.mov (please download before viewing!)
Enjoy!
Tony Davies-Patrick November 13th, 2006, 03:00 PM Wonderful footage Per - your best yet.
Bob Thompson November 13th, 2006, 03:54 PM Beautiful footage Per, as Tony said "your best yet"
Bob
Gabriel Yeager November 13th, 2006, 04:04 PM wow Per! your work is amazing! You are such an inspiration to me!
Thanks, alot! Your stuff is great!
~Gabriel~
Dale Guthormsen November 14th, 2006, 11:02 PM Per,
I think that is as fine of video/film of wildlife I have ever seen.
Living in the North and filming I can appreciate what it took to get that footage!! Are you shooting an xl2 and your tamaron 300 to get that??
Tony Davies-Patrick November 15th, 2006, 05:47 AM I think Per uses the Sigma 300mm f/2.8 not the Tamron.
Henry Gray November 16th, 2006, 05:04 AM Per - Super - It gets better with each edition.
Question; Do use the same lens for long shots and close ups and change
your location, or do you change your lens to the to the standard 20X for
long shots and your 300mm for close shots?
How do you keep from iceing up in these conditions ?
Great work, looking forward to part 6?
Per Johan Naesje November 16th, 2006, 05:47 AM Henry, thanks for your replay!
I do a combination with both lenses. the 300mm (2340mm) gives me a very narrow angle of view, approx 1.05 degree!
So, if I want to show the object surrounded by the landscape I use the 20x, with varied focal length. Then to get good close ups or to follow the object at distance I often use the 300mm.
I think you can view by studying the footage where I'm using the 300mm vs 20x. The air waves are much more visible when using the 300mm.
I was born far north in my country and I'm used to snow and cold weather, so it's just a practical issue to protect myself and the equipment from the severe conditions. But things is far from easy under such conditions, every move takes longer time, your fingers are freezing constantly. But when you sit there alone (most norwegians are indoors in front of the fireplace in this weather!), looking at these mammals, thinking that they lived on our planet 50 000 years ago! I get a warm feeling (most people do just before they freeze to death!) and I forget about the cold wind and snow which surround me.
Mat Thompson November 16th, 2006, 06:53 AM Hey Per
Great new footage, its all coming together very well! I hope your meeting went well and you have a solid basis to get the production the attention it deserves.
Great stuff.....keep it coming :)
Mat
Grant Sherman November 16th, 2006, 09:34 AM Great stuff again, Per
It's good seeing the changing conditions - although I don't think that I would like to be filming in that weather. I hope the meeting went well.
Grant
Ken Diewert November 24th, 2006, 02:32 PM Per Johan,
That is real winter! I had to put on a jacket just to watch it. That is a real testament to both the camera and operator to work in those conditions.
Great work and dedication to the craft.
Dean Bradshaw November 29th, 2006, 08:48 AM Fantastic footage, composition, colours, editing all perfect!
was this filmed at 24 frames per second (24F or 24p) or interlaced (60i or 50i)?
Per Johan Naesje November 30th, 2006, 03:19 AM was this filmed at 24 frames per second (24F or 24p) or interlaced (60i or 50i)?
Thanks Dean, I'm i PAL-country, I do most of my footage in 50i.
I have upgraded my equipment and will start to use Canon XLH1 (HDV 1080i) and Canon HV 10 as a B-camcorder. I have not received the XLH1 yet, but the HV 10 gives me an incredible picture.
I'll put some example footage on the web soon.
Mat Thompson November 30th, 2006, 04:00 AM Hey Per....out of interest why do you choose to shoot mostly in 50i and not 25p?
Richard Day November 30th, 2006, 05:39 PM I am new with an XL2...how do you shoot 50i?
Richard
Per Johan Naesje December 1st, 2006, 12:47 AM Mat:
This is a really good question. Why do some shoot in progressive and others in interlaced mode?
Well personally i like the nice motion blur between the frames that interlaced mode gives. Progressive gives a stuttering effect that I don't like.
Richard:
I'm in PAL-country and we are shooting either 50i or 25p. In NTSC (what you are using) you shoot in 60i or 24p/30p
The PAL use 25 frames per second, while NTSC use 29.97 frames per second.
So with a XL2 PAL camcorder you can only choose between 50i or 25p and with a XL2 NTSC you can choose between 60i, 30p or 24p
Richard Day December 1st, 2006, 02:45 PM Thanks Per for explaining.
Richard
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