Digital Still vs Digital Video
I'm a big advocate of the use of digital cameras for the purposes of stop motion animation. My main reasons being part subjective and part technical:
- You are taking still pictures so why would you want a video camera...
- The ability to control the aperture and exposure which allows control over your depth of field.
- You don't have to have a computer attached (see article giving the opposing view) hence you can do outside shoots easily.
- Resolution and image quality can be higher for the same cost
The key issues are:
- Power, care needs to be taken not to drain the batteries otherwise critical settings can be lost.
- Onion skinning, most digital cameras don't support this so you have to know how far to move the puppet which can result in jerky movements.
- Shutter cycles, basically the parts in your camera wear out. The typical life is 100,000 shots which can easily be reached in a longer project.
- Flickering due to different exposures for each frame, I've not actually seen this issue but it can be quite irritating apparently. See links below for why this occurs and how it can be avoided or corrected.
- Do not work natively with most of the off shelf stop motion software tools which assume you have a live video feed.
Digital Still Cams: How they work, Issues such as flickering, shutter exposure cycles, powerdown etc.
http://www.stopmotionworks.com/cams4stpmo.htm
Digital Camera Shutter Life
http://olegkikin.com/shutterlife/
Shutter life for my camera
http://olegkikin.com/shutterlife/oly_c5050z.htm
Stop Motion Pro - Frame Luminence Averaging functionality
http://www.stopmotionmaker.com/html/stop_motionmaker_adv.html
Choosing a Camera
http://www.stopmotionanimation.com/handbook/3.htm
1 comment:
Thanks for the info, very informative. I'm put this on my list of resources.
Dee
http://deezone.com
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