Trying To Get My Rig Together

When I decided to become a web developer I realized the only way to compete in a crowded marketplace was to offer websites with integrated video and photography. These are areas where I have expertise and many ‘devs’ do not.

I’ve got a website video shoot Monday.

My Canon 7D is primarily a still camera, but also great with video. Lots of TV shows and movies are shot with 7Ds and similar DSLRs

It’s just not ergonomically designed for moving pictures. For movies you need to add a ‘rig.’

A rig is a mount system for the camera which makes it more stable and easier to use when shooting video. I bought one with follow focus, hand grips and a shoulder brace. It came without instructions.

It was a little confusing to assemble. Even more confusing is deciding on a final configuration.

I headed over to my friend Steve’s house for some Allen Wrench therapy. He is the tool man!

There have to be at least a dozen possible adjustments. Each affects all the others. This is where instructions probably would have come in handy!

Did I want the hand grips moved forward? How I should I hold the rig for the camera to be parallel with the ground? Should the shoulder mount be long or short or… well, you get the idea.

We screwed with the assembly making loads of adjustments until it was reasonably comfortable. I shot some video of Steve, who at 6′ 5″, is a challenge to shoot. The video was steady. As I walked around, motion was smooth.

I’ll experiment a little more tomorrow, but I’m confident the rig works and will make a big difference. All I need is my own 9mm Allen Wrench!

The King Of time Lapse

Not to be too gushy, but it’s like discovering Spielberg before he did episodic TV. This guy will be that big.

I have been following Ross Ching’s work for a few years. He’s a West Coast guy not long out of college. He is the king of time lapse photography!

Though his first movies were abstract, a technician honing the mechanics, he’s now branched into more mainstream projects including commercials and music videos. Not to be too gushy, but it’s like discovering Spielberg before he did episodic TV. This guy will be that big.

Ross just posted a new time lapse movie “Running On Empty.” It asks and answers the question, “What if tomorrow everyone’s car disappeared.”

Time Lapse: Iceland, Eyjafjallajökull Volcano

The lenses and resolution available along with the size and weight of DSLRs allows for images that just weren’t produced by amateurs before.

One of the recent surprising products of DSLR still cameras has been unreal time lapse photography. The lenses and resolution available along with the size and weight of the DSLRs allow for images that just weren’t produced by amateurs before.

The photographer is a little cryptic but I think he’s using an experimental dolly from MILAPSE, a Michigan time lapse photographer who has pioneered inexpensive options for adding camera motion to time lapse.

The movie below was shot earlier this month in Iceland.