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Tricks with a video camera Newsgroups: rec.video Subject: what to film with your video camera The volume of the response to my last article was underwhelming :-( 8*( I had asked: Do you rich people with movie collections edit "stock" Hollywood footage into your home movies? Do you ever produce "Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid" or "Zellig" movies where you play opposite some famous movies star(s)? Only one respondant, Don Pavlish (ag167@cleveland.Freenet.edu) replied. He sent me some great ideas for special effects and lots of info about in-camera editing. Here are some of his hints. 1. SPLIT SCREEN: Get a small (maybe 9" x 9") mirror (WITHOUT A FRAME/BORDER) and hold it so it takes up about half of the picture: --------------- | :mirror| | :mirror| | :mirror| --------------- Now, hold the mirror at a 45 degree angle to the camera: TOP VIEW: _________ |camera |-| | | | |_______|-| ` <---- mirror ` The screen will appear split, the half with out the mirrt(or will be on the left, and on the right you will see whatever is directly to the right (from camera's point of view) of the mirror. This can be used for one of those scenes where someone is speaking on the phone to someone else, and you see both of them via split screen... etc. 2. SUPERIMPOSE A GHOST on a SCENE: Use the same setup as the mirror trick, expect: a) use a block of glass instead of a mirror b) instead of covering the screen halfway, cover the ENTIRE screen with the angled mirror. Aim the camera at say, a long shot of a room (dim lighting works best). Now the camera is shooting through the angled mirror: TOP VIEW: |camera |-| ` | | | ` <--- glass ROOM |_______|-| ` ` PERSON'S FACE Position a face up close to the glass so it reflects in the glass (light the face with a flashlight). The camera will see the room normally through the glass, and a reflection of a large face on the glass... Your face will be superimposed over the room. This can be used, for example, to have a huge face in a window ( (the window is where the ROOM is in the above diagram, and make sue sure you do it at night so the window is dark, since the reflection will show up best against a dark background.) 3. WHIP-PAN: Ever done a "whip-pan"? This is a trick that, when used properly in a movie, will signal a change of location. At the end of a scene in location A, when the last shot is finished and you are about to hit the record PAUSE/STOP button, suddenly 'whip' the camera around to one side, fast as possible, and while the camera is in motion, hit the PAUSE/STOP button. Then, move to your new location, and start the camera 'whipping' to begin. A second or two later, stop the camera on your actor. You will have to fool around and figure out how soon your camera waits after you hit the button to start taping, but this trick is pretty good. It can also be used to show a man throwing a spear, for example, then the camera whips over to show a guy with a spear in his chest. The whip itself should be fast enough so everything is blurred during it. And, keep the direction of the whip steady during the cut. If you whipped the camera right for the first half of the blur, keep it going right in the second half with the new scene. A view viewer will NOT be able to see where you stopped, it will look like one continous whip.