santucci
2007 May 12th, 09:38
Dear friends owners of HV20,
I’m a owner of a higher model camera that got very exited by the HV20. In a way, the HV20 was exacly what I was waiting for, for a couple years. A small 24p camera with a great price. Thanks Canon! Major congratulations for this one. I really didn’t see it coming aftar all the 24F models that were made.
Anyway, the reason I writing is that I do work on a higher level of professional cameras and I would like to know who far can I go with the little one. I hope some one from Canon get to read this post.
I’m a filmmaker and I own a Sony F900. From my expertise in the field, the major points to get close to a film result are: True 24 frames per second progressive capture, 1/48 shutter speed, and a gama curve that tries to mimic the low end and high end curves (in other words lift blacks and compress the high lights).
How to achive that on the HV20 for a professional work, such as a documentary that could benefit greatly from the size of the HV20? There is nothing out there in the professional world that will offer what the HV20 does for it’s size and mobility.
After experimenting with the HV20 it seems that the way to get the cinematic look would be thru the CINE MODE, however it seems that the only way to maintain the 48 shutter is thru TV mode which would loose the gamma characteristics that are achieved in the CINE MODE. It appears that in CINE MODE the camera alters shutter speed to handle for correct exposer.
I’m curios to understand what the camera is doing by it self to correct for exposure. Usually on a proffesional camera you have: + /- DBs , Lenses Iris, and ND filters and shutter. On the HV20 it seems that it uses shutter and iris plus something else that might be a hidden DB control.
I would love to find out what the camera does exacly but the bottom line is: Can I have it with 1/48 shutter, cine mode gama, and not have that changed automaticly by the camera when trying to auto adjust for over or under exposer?
It seems that if I set in TV for 1/48 and than change to cine mode and put in manual iris it might work. But the question is: when you goin cine mode can you lock to a specific shutter such as 1/48?
Another way would be go to TV and try to adjust the gama thru the other settings in CUSTOM IMAGE EFFECTS. Would that give the same characteristics of CINE MODE?
I hope some one from Canon can answer this one. For the digital independent film community would be great.
Thanks Roberto Santucci
I’m a owner of a higher model camera that got very exited by the HV20. In a way, the HV20 was exacly what I was waiting for, for a couple years. A small 24p camera with a great price. Thanks Canon! Major congratulations for this one. I really didn’t see it coming aftar all the 24F models that were made.
Anyway, the reason I writing is that I do work on a higher level of professional cameras and I would like to know who far can I go with the little one. I hope some one from Canon get to read this post.
I’m a filmmaker and I own a Sony F900. From my expertise in the field, the major points to get close to a film result are: True 24 frames per second progressive capture, 1/48 shutter speed, and a gama curve that tries to mimic the low end and high end curves (in other words lift blacks and compress the high lights).
How to achive that on the HV20 for a professional work, such as a documentary that could benefit greatly from the size of the HV20? There is nothing out there in the professional world that will offer what the HV20 does for it’s size and mobility.
After experimenting with the HV20 it seems that the way to get the cinematic look would be thru the CINE MODE, however it seems that the only way to maintain the 48 shutter is thru TV mode which would loose the gamma characteristics that are achieved in the CINE MODE. It appears that in CINE MODE the camera alters shutter speed to handle for correct exposer.
I’m curios to understand what the camera is doing by it self to correct for exposure. Usually on a proffesional camera you have: + /- DBs , Lenses Iris, and ND filters and shutter. On the HV20 it seems that it uses shutter and iris plus something else that might be a hidden DB control.
I would love to find out what the camera does exacly but the bottom line is: Can I have it with 1/48 shutter, cine mode gama, and not have that changed automaticly by the camera when trying to auto adjust for over or under exposer?
It seems that if I set in TV for 1/48 and than change to cine mode and put in manual iris it might work. But the question is: when you goin cine mode can you lock to a specific shutter such as 1/48?
Another way would be go to TV and try to adjust the gama thru the other settings in CUSTOM IMAGE EFFECTS. Would that give the same characteristics of CINE MODE?
I hope some one from Canon can answer this one. For the digital independent film community would be great.
Thanks Roberto Santucci