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Re: Canon USA introduces EOS-1D C Digital SLR camera featuring 4K
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But that aside, you're saying that as you shoot an interview you can consistently predict when you'll need to cut to a different angle? Frankly, that's amazing to me, and we clearly work differently. When I shoot an interview I usually cut most of it out in post. When I need to cut in the middle of a shot, and I either don't have or it's inappropriate to cut away to b-roll to cover it I'll often cut to the other angle rather than have a jump cut. I may be wrong in assuming anyone else works that way, but personally I can't imagine how I would predict exactly when those cuts would happen ahead of time, on the fly, during the shoot, every time. Quote:
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Re: Canon USA introduces EOS-1D C Digital SLR camera featuring 4K
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Re: Canon USA introduces EOS-1D C Digital SLR camera featuring 4K
I know on a 550D you need to switch the camera to Pal in order to use 25P this is done in a separate menu to the rest of the frame rate options. Perhaps there is Pal/NTSC buried deep in the menus?
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Re: Canon USA introduces EOS-1D C Digital SLR camera featuring 4K
Good thought Sam. Hope you're right!
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Re: Canon USA introduces EOS-1D C Digital SLR camera featuring 4K
The EOS-1D C does not allow you to change it via the internal Menu. The specs detail that it has Pal 25P in all the lower resolutions except the highest 4K which is ONLY 24fps.
It details all the Pal options, yet nothing for the highest video resolution. Very strange for Canon to do this...unless the spec-sheets are incorrect. Canon official details NO 25P: http://cpn.canon-europe.com/content/...c_explained.do Almost 80% of the world use 25P (and Secam), including Bollywood in India (which is bigger than Hollywood in films produced), Australia, South Africa, Europe etc... Latest news update from those lucky enough to handle the EOS-1D C is that you definitely need to drop to 2K to use 25P. |
Re: Canon USA introduces EOS-1D C Digital SLR camera featuring 4K
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Reminds me of the 'international' (sic) competition ran by Canon USA and Vimeo a couple of years back, "The Story Beyond The Still" which was... Open to US residents only! It's a crying shame. Look at who Sony recruited to tell their engineers what developments they wanted to see out of the FS700... An international team of cinematographers consulted. You really need that input to engineer something for international use. What did we get? 50/60Hz switchable, etc... You gather a group of American DoPs, engineers together to brainstorm the developments required for the next upgrade, you're hardly going to get one of them standing up saying, "We'll need 25fps in there too for our British counterparts!" |
Re: Canon USA introduces EOS-1D C Digital SLR camera featuring 4K
Off topic. Kris, if your anywhere near the runway at Gatwick a Virgin plane has just made an emergency landing there - evacuation with chutes deployed etc. No word yet on any details yet. Hope all got off OK (these things usually result in the odd broken leg).
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Re: Canon USA introduces EOS-1D C Digital SLR camera featuring 4K
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Re: Canon USA introduces EOS-1D C Digital SLR camera featuring 4K
Can't believe I'm reading this "nationalistic" stuff. Is it really necessary, Kris? Jesus, haven't we learnt yet, take away the accent and the address and we're all the same.
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Re: Canon USA introduces EOS-1D C Digital SLR camera featuring 4K
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Re: Canon USA introduces EOS-1D C Digital SLR camera featuring 4K
Is the lack of 25p such a deal breaker or is it just an inconvenience? The difference between 24p & 25p is only 4% & for years we in PAL-land have been viewing 24fps Hollywood movies on DVD speeded up 4% & nobody noticed. I could understand if the camera only had the old NTSC 30/29.97 rate then it would be a really big issue. The only real problem that I can see is if you wanted to intercut footage of the same scene shot simultaneously with other cameras that only shot 25p (e.g. a PAL Canon XF305 without the $400 24p/30p firmware upgrade).
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Re: Canon USA introduces EOS-1D C Digital SLR camera featuring 4K
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Re: Canon USA introduces EOS-1D C Digital SLR camera featuring 4K
I like the EOS 1D C for some unaccountable reason.
The codec is easy to manipulate with either still image processing tools, or even homebrew code. (Reading JPEG files is straightforward.) It writes onto commonly available media. And it's a compact device. In fact I've got a couple of ideas where this would fit really well. I'd be interested to know what the bit rate is, and does it suffer from rolling shutter. As for the 25 fps thing, I wouldn't be surprised if that turns up in a firmware update. It doesn't significantly more bandwidth than 24 fps, so I doubt that the camera's hardware is the limiting factor. |
Re: Canon USA introduces EOS-1D C Digital SLR camera featuring 4K
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This reasoning reminds me a bit of the early 90s when quite a few were perplexed to why we started developing tools for 24bit/96kHz audio. Their argument back then was that the 24/96 was just a fad "since no one could possibly hear the difference between it and the established 16/48 standard". I.e., not realizing how useful such dense & linear material would be in post processing. The same goes for video shot in 4K -- in post you'll have more leverage to crop, zoom and tweak it beyond any regular HD footage -- no matter if its final destination is "only" 1080p. -- peer |
Re: Canon USA introduces EOS-1D C Digital SLR camera featuring 4K
Yes Peer, but just like then, people can't hear the difference between 44k, 48k, or 96k. As a producer I've been involved in a number of blind tests like this comparing the highest spec audio gear, preamps etc.
David's point is still the most relevant. For the vast majority of people buying any and all of the cameras and post gear we're discussing, the end result of their work will be shown at significantly lower res than 1080p let alone 4k, either regional, local TV, and more and more web distribution. Not that deeper color space and bit depth aren't important - they are. When I produce a project there's a good chance it will be broadcast in HD, SD, on web and shown on large screens at events. That's where a camera like the BM looks promising with great latitude and color space. 4k has real value, but in the list of priorities to 95% of the camera market it's just a gimmick right now simply because the work that they're producing and distributing will not benefit from it in a practical space. We do a ton of post and grading and pro res 4:2:2 does everything anyone needs for anything from broadcast down. |
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