A sense of lurking malice hid in the atmosphere, unseen forces swept through the air and the ocean, elements whipping each other into a frenzy. The usually idyllic Sunshine Coast had turned feral and it surely was a sight to behold!
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With the weather putting all my shoots on an indefinite hiatus until it clears, I had the perfect opportunity to get out with the camera and shoot a little bit of what’s going on at the moment. We are getting pummeled by heavy rainfall, strong winds and king tides – It’s not the best, but it sure is interesting! The surf is big and supposed to be increasing right up until Wednesday and it should make for some great footage if this onshore wind will let up.
This was a bit of an experiment today, with different settings, white balances, filters, time lapse, slow motion. . .and of course some playing with the Glidetrack Shooter for the first time in a shoot of this kind. Got to admit, I had a ball!
It’s been ages since I got to go out and just shoot for fun and I really enjoyed it, even though it felt like shooting in a Coriolis storm!
As usual, I shot it all on the 7D with the usual crop of glass. Nothing too different there – Sigma 30mm f1.4, Tokina 11-16 f2.8, Canon 100-400 IS 4.5-5.6 and 70-200 f2.8 IS USM.
I didn’t have too long to shoot, knew that I wanted to attempt a very harsh color profile in camera and had some ideas of what I wanted to capture. The wild sea, some time lapses of the clouds as the wind was howling and they were moving super fast, and hopefully some people watching. I got lucky on all counts, with the bonus being some Kiteboarders who were the only ones to brave the conditions. Funnily enough, the kiteboarder in the red is the same Kiteboarder from the 7D test video I uploaded ages ago! I found out his name is Mick and he is the Stickerman here on the Sunshine Coast. So good on ya Mick! Thanks again for the footage!
There were quite a few people watching and despite a few curious glances at the strange looking guy with the Glidetrack, on the ground behind the spectators, everything went pretty smoothly.
Got to say I do love this Glidetrack Shooter so far, but I am still a bit of a novice with it and still yet to learn how and when to employ it to the greatest benefit. It is a lot of fun though and quite smooth along the slide. I ended up getting a little Manfrotto 701HDV head for it. That was a good move, it uses the same base plate as my 503HDV and means I can quickly pull the Glidetrack on and off my main tripod legs without any hassle and also switch the camera in between both of them without having to change base plates. It’s very useful and I’d say almost essential for shooting on the move. It has taken a bit of getting used to in terms of setting up and balancing and what not since it’s a tripod mounted on a tripod, and as you can see in the wide shot with the people watching I noticed it develops a gradual lean when moving from one side to the other. It’s not very noticeable when viewed in real time and you can really only see it because of the speed ramp applied to the shot, but it’s something I need to investigate so I can stop it from happening. Something about the drawing board and a trip back to it. . .who knows?!
There is some funny business going on with some frame blending artifacts on the sped up clip of the tree and the clouds. I have found a slight hiccup with MPEG Streamclip and the fact that the transcoding process actually creates interlaced footage. Yes I’m aware it’s Progressive interlaced footage, where both fields contain information from the exact same moment in time and hence when displayed together create one entire progressive frame. But I don’t want that, I’ve found that speed changes with frame blending enabled and also Smoothcam can make this footage show it’s true ugly interlaced colours in the form interlaced banding. Something I was glad to see the back of when I got my HVX! And now it’s BACK!!! Ugghhh. . .So MPEG Streamclip only allows you to select the options “Upper field first” or “Lower field first”. It doesn’t let you choose ‘none’, or ‘progressive’, like After Effects or Final Cut. If anybody knows a way, please share, this is annoying me and so far I’ve only been able to achieve true progressive output in ProRes LT with Compressor. But as you may or may not know, Compressor takes much longer than MPEG Streamclip to do the same thing, so it’s not really a path I want to embrace at this stage. I’m putting it out there! Any ideas?
So for the last time lapse I used my little chinese intervalometer, which, by the way, has a bung screen but is still usable. It was just a 1.6 second exposure fired off every 2 seconds. Finally I got some decent wave motion. I decided to play it back at a slower frame rate just so the motion wasn’t so fast you couldn’t appreciate what was going on. I think that works well with waves, so you can actually see whats happening.
The music in this video is by The Last Atlant and the song is called ‘Everything is Illuminated’. A great track off an even greater album, ‘Cloudburst of Colours’. Get on it, no doubt you’ll enjoy the whole album if you liked this track!
Anyway, it’s definitely not a masterpiece, but I had heaps of fun shooting it which is all that matters at the end of the day. . .and I didn’t get rained on too much, which is a huge bonus.
Hopefully the swell picks up even more over the next few days and we get some real carnage going on! Fingers crossed!
More soon!
And for you Vimeo Lovers!

Like the video Christian. What profile did you use for the 7D and where can I grab it?
Also, can you give a little walkthrough of the post work you did on this? cheers!
Hey Dan,
Thanks mate! I just did what I usually do – use the default picture profiles in the camera, play with all the settings and whack on filters until it looks like I want it to. Sometimes you win, sometimes you don’t, and there aren’t really any rules that I follow. Experimentation is key!
As far as post, all I did was conform the 60P footage to 25P to get my slow motion and cut it up in Final Cut to music. There was no post colour correction at all on this clip, usually I do a contrast tweak here and there at least, but this time the footage is straight out of the camera. There are a couple of speed change effects in there, but that’s all.
Cheers for the comment mate!
Christian
That looks terrific. The glide works really well. Best with that track-in at the start, but not so interesting without foreground, during side-tracks (need paralax changes there).I would love to see that last Timelapse (slo-mo) with frame blending, just to smooth out the waves a bit (to stroby at the moment). Just not sure at what stage streamclip is being employed, is that at the end or a pre-post conversion?
Hey David,
Cheers for the feedback mate!
Yeah, still getting that Glidtrack sussed. I’m looking more for a really subtle effect that adds depth, instead of the constant, glaringly obvious, OOF foreground parallax motion thing. It can get a bit samey, ya’know?
I transcode all my footage using MPEG Streamclip before I edit, that’s where it becomes an interlaced stream. Still haven’t found a way around it.
Christian
I dont get it, If the input media is progressive it shouldnt matter that it gets interlaced later. Also there doesnt seem to be a format called 1080p, do you cut 720p or 1080i?
When slomo-ing the footage the fields shouldnt be greatly different (it is progressively scanned between frames rather than fields) so I dont understand where the banding comes from.
I havent had any slomo errors on FCP before but havent had a lot of progressive either. Could there be a field dominance issue at FCp end? Have you tried the field shift effect (sometimes it gets applied automatically for no reason) this can be creating field sampling errors too.
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Can you use the slide for a vertical track/jib shot?