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Re: To Buy or Borrow

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Re: To Buy or Borrow
by Ron Lindeboom on Jul 20, 2009 at 7:03:32 pm

[Lisa Koza] "I want and need my footage to look great for this gig because it's an important one because the middle guy will prob give me more jobs like this in the future. I guess my question is, should I A) rely on someone else to lend me his stuff. and B) can an XL1 really give me something decent in image??"

Hi Lisa,

Todd is quite right that the XL1 is sufficient.

I had one for a couple of years and loved it. I always like to say that Canon has set their chip technology to mimic the warmer "Kodak film's reds and golds of autumn" look, rather than the greens and blues of Fuji look.

But that is my preference.

If you are going to be using Photoshop and After Effects, you can do a little cheating and deinterlace in AE, export as numbered sequential files from AE, open the numbered files in Photoshop and batch process the files up-rezzing them using something like onOne Software's Genuine Fractals plug-in to a larger size image that you want. (Contrary to what some may think, I have had very good results from Genuine Fractals -- I hate the plastic look of Alien Skin's Blow Up plug-in which looks like visual crap most times.)

Another trick I have done in addition to the process just outlined -- that I once used for a piece that I did which director Gene Snow of MadTV watched and swore was shot on 35mm film (it was actually some old Hi-8 camera footage that I had laying around of a subject that was very important to me) -- is to lay the same footage on top of itself in exactly the same position on the timeline and set the blend mode on the top layer to influence and modify the lower layer's image. Sometimes, the multiply mode will add some real saturation and intensity when it is set anywhere from about 15% up to around 40%, depending on the footage you are tweaking.

By deinterlacing, exporting as sequential numbered files, up-rezzing, duplicating the video layer and affecting it using blend modes, you can many times get images that are far beyond the starting point.

Would I do this on a long project? No. But if the project is a short enough project and you have some time on your hands and want to learn some tricks that you can add to your creative repertoire, you may wish to play with this idea a bit.

Best regards,

Ron Lindeboom

Creativity is a type of learning process where the teacher and pupil are located in the same individual.

Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away.
- Antoine de Saint Exupéry






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