Reddit » Cinematography
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Cinematography is a forum dedicated to becoming an active resource for cinematographers of all skill levels.
Reddit » Cinematography
2d ago
It looks so good
He looks so good in it too
submitted by /u/ZenBuddhism
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Reddit » Cinematography
2d ago
It’s been discontinued and impossible to find at US retailers as a result.
submitted by /u/artfulscience
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Reddit » Cinematography
2d ago
Context: I'm a low-budget filmmaker who's currently prepping their second short horror film.
I lit my first short primarily with china balls to save money and it was just a massive, time-consuming pain in the ass even though I was quite happy with the end result.
As I've made a short and had it premiere at a festival now I thought I'd treat myself by buying a versatile light which can be used to light rooms and basically make the process of lighting less of a headache.
The Amaran 300c came up a lot in my research as a great light for filmmakers who don't have thousands to spend on lights. The ..read more
Reddit » Cinematography
2d ago
I found this page that creates these creative color palettes of movie scenes (www.instagram.com/colorpalette.cinema) How do they do this? Is there a website or place that can do something similar?
submitted by /u/gman13579
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Reddit » Cinematography
2d ago
Is copywriter music a no no? This is for an event I’m going to tomorrow.
submitted by /u/LCFilmmaking
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Reddit » Cinematography
3d ago
I’m considering upgrading from our SLR Magic APOs for some t1.5 lenses for the extra stop of light.
Right now I’m thinking about going with the Otuses (with the 35mm Milvus) as they seem to be able to be used wide open.
Sharp and usable wide open are actually two things I’m looking for, in addition to still being somewhat pretty. So I guess it’s three things…
Are there any other t1.5 lenses that are sharp, usable wide open, and somewhat pretty. Oh yeah, and if we can use our 82mm NDs with them, all the better (the Otuses have an 86mm filter thread which when used with a step down ring fortuna ..read more
Reddit » Cinematography
3d ago
Hello, I am a photography nerd, and I am looking to dig into cinematography. I have a pretty signature style, but I was looking for a little help with deciding a camera. The best way to put it in short is a camera with the quality of something like the film “Harold and Kumar go to White Castle,” but in a more technical way, something that has a nice level of grain, decent clarity, and a resolution of 720p to 1080p. I would prefer something on the cheaper side, maybe around $300-400 at my low and $700-800 on my high. My best way to describe it is probably 90’s-00’s style filming. My first look ..read more
Reddit » Cinematography
3d ago
I honestly don’t know any other way to phrase my question. Like, the lighting on Netflix projects (movies, tv shows, and documentries) isn’t the worst, they just look off. Like it’s either too bright, or too dark, or just messes up with the color somehow. Why does Netflix’s lighting look so different than compared to other streaming services (even Amazon Prime Video looks better, and streaming isn’t even Amazons main business model)
It’s the same with the set design, not the worst, just not as good as it should be for their projects. Although I understand that set design is not the same as ci ..read more