- Thread starter
- Moderator
- #121
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2007
- Messages
- 13,390
- Reaction score
- 793
- Points
- 113
- Location
- Los Angeles
- Website
- www.phfx.com
Well, just when I thought I had nothing else to really report something interesting happened today.
In the process of testing gear you're sort of feeling things out rather than getting a feel for natural use.
Check this out.
I'm shooting some textural macro work today. Now macro is always an interesting game of desired depth of field and framing. So I'm using the rocker on my DSMC Side Handle to adjust the Motion Mount's ND in .10 stop increments while adjusting the iris on the lens to sort get the right feel for my subject with the out of focus area in mind while keeping my exposure in balance. That was sort of freaky cool.
Another interesting thing that spawned from this was I hadn't actually filled up my histogram bucket just yet, so I could actually tweak my final exposure via the Motion Mount to get a more favorable exposure towards how I'm going to work with this material later. (I know I'm yanking the shadows down pretty hard)
This was really the first day where my analytic brain shut off and the Motion Mount naturally effected the way I was working. This really isn't something you can do with normal ND filters. Certainly not this precise and not this fast. I was literally looking at the monitor and making those decisions without jumping away for a filter change. I'm not one for "hype speak", but this sort of made me stand up and go "hmm. That's new". Fun stuff. I imagine more happy incidents will occur like this out in the wild.
In the process of testing gear you're sort of feeling things out rather than getting a feel for natural use.
Check this out.
I'm shooting some textural macro work today. Now macro is always an interesting game of desired depth of field and framing. So I'm using the rocker on my DSMC Side Handle to adjust the Motion Mount's ND in .10 stop increments while adjusting the iris on the lens to sort get the right feel for my subject with the out of focus area in mind while keeping my exposure in balance. That was sort of freaky cool.
Another interesting thing that spawned from this was I hadn't actually filled up my histogram bucket just yet, so I could actually tweak my final exposure via the Motion Mount to get a more favorable exposure towards how I'm going to work with this material later. (I know I'm yanking the shadows down pretty hard)
This was really the first day where my analytic brain shut off and the Motion Mount naturally effected the way I was working. This really isn't something you can do with normal ND filters. Certainly not this precise and not this fast. I was literally looking at the monitor and making those decisions without jumping away for a filter change. I'm not one for "hype speak", but this sort of made me stand up and go "hmm. That's new". Fun stuff. I imagine more happy incidents will occur like this out in the wild.