Viva La Bleu on the Canon 5DMKII & 7D

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Man, this was fun! Fun to shoot and fun to edit! After a month or so of chopping away at commercial gigs, this was just some good ‘ol fashion candy coloured, idealistic fun!

It’s nice to take a step back from everything sometimes and just shoot some stuff that feels good. It’s a good time of year for it too. Around the end of April the temperatures are starting to drop a little, the skies are starting to clear up and with the diminishing rainfall, there is little silt washing down the rivers into the ocean, leaving it crystal clear. It’s this fortuitous combination of meteorological phenomena that makes this time of year such a lovely time to shoot.

All of this footage has been shot over the last 2 or so weeks. A mixture of the Canon 5DMKII and the Canon 7D. Canon 5DMKII for the lower light sunset stuff so I can keep shooting a little later and Canon 7D for the blue sky daytime stuff, basically because I have polarising options on the Canon 7D that I don’t have on the Canon 5DMKII. . .yet.

Did I mention it was fun shooting this?. . .Yes. . .Where were we?

I shot this with a mixture of the usual suspects. . .that being, the increasingly insufficient bag of lenses that I lug around, detailed greatly elsewhere on this blog. Man, I’m hanging to get some new glass for the Canon 5DMKII.

The new Canon TS-E 17mm F/4L didn’t get too much of a run here, with this kind of footage, I really missed the ability to be able to whack a polariser on the front. Likewise being without ND grads really limit this lens as a landscape type of lens for me. If I could filter it, I would be absolutely stoked! I had been using the Tokina 11-16 f2.8 ATX on the Canon 5DMKII. By itself, it works passably from 15-16mm, but with the polariser on you get a bit of hard, unflattering vignetting at the edges. So whenever I needed a wide polarised shot, I turned to the Canon 7D. I could have fixed this with a dedicated Wide Angle lens for the Canon 5DMKII, but this solution will work well for now. I don’t mind running two camera’s and would rather keep doing this so I can invest into other glass first, instead of buying another wide angle.

There are a couple of Canon 5DMKII shots in there with the Sigma 30mm f1.4. I just scaled them up a little to remove the darkest of the vignette, I’m sure you’ll spot it/them in there, it’s quite noticeable. Funny that in that OOF background, there is a ring of slightly more in focus detail inherent in the fringe of the vignette. It’s weird and kind of takes away from the perception of depth. I’m not sure if you can see it here, but it’s there. . .trust me (I mean that in a totally un-facebook, not creepy way, honest!)

The Canon 100-400 f4.5-5.6L was great for the yachts on the water at Mooloolaba, but I have since taken to leaving it at home more recently. The camera bag was growing in weight and considering I wasn’t using it every time I shot, decided to see how I would go without it, relying only on the Canon 70-200 f2.8L IS USM. I can say, my back really appreciated not having it in there, but I did miss it a couple of times for sure. Especially when shooting from up high on the cliff in Coolum, it would have come in great handy there. The Canon 70-200 f2.8L IS USM’s bokeh at f2.8 was pleasant though, and it was nice to be limited on focal length for a while. It makes me walk more and in the process, see shots I might not have come across.

The music in this clip, Revtone – Love Movement (Ulrich Schnauss Remix) is off a compilation, Global Underground 030 – Paris – Mixed by Nick Warren, one of my favourite DJ’s. Ulrich Schnauss has a very typical sound, very atmospheric and it was playing in the car while I was cruising around shooting some of this footage up at Coolum. When I heard it, I immediately knew that this would be the soundtrack to this footage. Cruisy, beautiful and not in a hurry to get anywhere. It would allow the shots to just hang there for a couple of seconds extra, allowing the eye to really roam around the image.

Usually I burn shots, 1-2 seconds and out, and I did start doing that at the end because it was too monotonous, but this time I wanted to more reflect the feeling I had when I was shooting it. Which was a whimsical kind of relaxed concentration. . .Very Sunshine Coast! :)

My own criticisms. . .This clip is about two minutes too long. At 2:30 it would have been a corker. In, out and left me wanting to see more. Trouble is, this one is a bit of a dual purpose clip. I intend to utilise this for other applications and wanted it to be a bit longer than what I usually cut. There are some shots in there that hang a little too long and it loses momentum somewhere in the middle. A little editing of the song might not have gone astray here, but there is only so long I can spend on these things. At the end of the day, this is not a show reel (Which I am working on at the moment) or anything, just a collection of footage shot over the past two or so weeks.

Things to look out for. . .

  • Some very nasty aliasing on the sunset shot across the bay from the Canon 5DMKII. One was so bad I couldn’t include it. perhaps I need to wind the sharpness down as detailed in various places around the net.
  • Sigma 30mm f1.4 EX DC HSM Vignetting. What’s your thoughts on that? Fan or hater?
  • Glidetrack love. . .and love it is. . .I really do love it. (In an entirely not creepy way. . .)
  • The video’s stupid title. . .watch that. . .it was late and I was strapped for ideas. . .I think in German it means “Flying burger sausage”. Perhaps not.
  • The second last shot, a little noisy (ok, alot!). . .That was Canon 5DMKII with the Tilt Shift on at 6400 ISO. With some noise removal it might have come good. For me, it’s better having a noisy shot than no shot at all. I’m not going to a 35mm print for theatrical distribution so it’s not going to cause me much trouble.
  • The last shot. This was my first attempt at a proper night timelapse of the stars. It’s not an amazingly interesting shot, it was after all my first crack, taken from my front yard and a test more than anything. I just really wanted to use it here, since it was something different. I’ve become quite inspired, as I’m sure many other have, by Tom’s work, over at Timescapes. That guy is seriously one of the most talented out there, more so than any of the other DSLR ‘pioneers’ out there. Check him out, you’ll be glad you did.

Anyway, that’s enough crap from me, it’s late and I’ve proven myself unworthy of continuing to type at this keyboard.

I hope you enjoy the flick, if there’s anything I missed, just flick me a comment!

More soon. . . :)

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11 comments to Viva La Bleu on the Canon 5DMKII & 7D

  • Nice Christian, geez 4.35, that was an epic for you. Fav shot, the surfer in front of Old Woman Island… nice composition and in the right place at the right time. The Tilt shift on the Esplanade shops was cute too. Ditto on Tom. it was he that inspired Mr Bloom to try Time Lapse.

    Talk about chalk and cheese with gear, my latest Time Lapse toy is a GoproHD glued to the top of a rotating egg timer ….haha, but it’s all fun hey.

    Can’t wait for the next one
    Cheers Rambo

    • Christian

      Hahaha! Cheers Rambo! Man, that Egg timer sounds like a great idea! :) Cheaper than a bloody $7K moco rig!

      Got to have a chat to you about those GoPro Cams mate. I would love to have a look at one before I take the plunge.

      Christian

  • Justin

    Love it! Made me want to get out in the surf. Great footage. Especially liked the tracking shot revealing the headland at 1:20

    Justin

    • Christian

      Cheers Justin! I know how you feel, I felt almost stupid for being there shooting it instead of being out there in it! Ahhh. . .next time. . .maybe! :)

  • Dave

    Love that star field! And how on earth did you stabilise the camera for those extreme long shots of the boats on the horizon? I thought that the beach was windy!

    Was it all 5D?

    • Christian

      Hey Dave,

      Yeah, it was a little windy, but mostly offshore. Couple that with the high rises along the beach and I was pretty sheltered. There is some minute shake in the shot of the Coast Guard boat, but for the most part, the old tripod does a decent enough job of keeping things steady unless it’s blowing a gale.

      As I said in the post above. . .most of the daytime stuff was 7D, the sunset stuff, 5D. . .purely for reasons relating to the polarising options I have on my lenses.

      More stars to come, this is just the beginning. . .already talking about hiring a bus and heading out west. . .Game on! :)

      Christian

  • Dave

    THAT is awesome! I have been racking my brain to make a water drip pan or tilt solution, but that takes the cake.

  • Vitor Bonfim

    From Brazil, congratulations!

  • For the alaising (and any ISO noise) i use a Final Cut Pro plugin called “NeatVideo.” Best money you ever spent, hands down. Treats ISO 1600 footage noise in the blacks like its nothing. If you do go this route, know that the rendering takes a very long time… after your final edit and color grades, you pretty much have to analyze each clip individually with the plug-in, (or else it’ll come out weird if you just do 1 and copy and paste to the rest of them), set it to render overnight and forget about it until the morning. The results however, are well worth it. As for this video, I absolutely love it; I love the place it takes you to when you watch… and as for the length, I feel that any videos of paradise can never be too long, especially in this day and age! Great feeling, great mood, great job!

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