I got a professional looking matte box. Then what? 4x4 filters? Replace all vintage SLR lenses with video friendly lenses? Spend more?
Yeap vintage SLR lenses are not optimized for video. Horrible to use with a matte box. I got an idea. I will use a matte box without 4x4 filters. Use a matte box and a screw-in Fader ND filter. e.g. Nikkor 50mm Ai-s & 52mm Fader ND & a matte box work. That sounds crazy but I must do that for some clients who want to see a big matte box. Give'em peace of mind. Make'em happy. For my personal candid work, use a collapsible rubber hood. Problem solved. I'm returning a defective copy of Samyang 35mm lens for full refund.
Gawd I'm feeling great. Save more money for the upcoming 12-35mm Lumix G X lens.
Rethinking about vintage lenses. Normally I use them at 2.0 or higher. Why not use the fast m43 zooms instead? Usually prime lenses are smaller and perform better than zooms at same aperture. Also they must be matte box and FF friendly. But vintage lens + adapter are bulky and heavy. Great news. Samyang just released 7.5mm m43 prime and plans to release more m43 lenses next year. Compact m43 primes with modern design, MF, and inner focus. Imagine Samyang 50mm 1.4 about the size of m.zuiko 45mm 1.8. No more cheap Chinese adapter. Hopefully not heavy breathing. See Nokton 25mm 0.95. Great m43 prime although not fixed length barrel.
As I'm getting more native m43 lenses, I will sell more vintage lenses. Eventually no more vintage lens. Totally locking into m43 format. That's great. I wouldn't be able to switch to another system. No more spending. Then my working set will be complete. Long live to m43!!!
@stonebat "I will use a matte box without 4x4 filters. Use a matte box and a screw-in Fader ND filter... That sounds crazy but I must do that for some clients who want to see a big matte box... For my personal candid work, use a collapsible rubber hood."
That's what I do for the most part, and for my purposes, screw-on ND filters are more reliable than matte box filters. When using wide-angle lenses with studio lighting, however, I've had flare problems that only the extended flags of a matte box can handle. I found a cheap velcro-attached fold-flat flag at Cinetactics:
@LPowell You got a nice working set. I don't need best gears. I just need a working set. I'd use Fader ND filter instead of cheap 4x4 filter... for now... until there is a better alternative.
I like Cinematics logo. The matte box looks quite nice.
@LPowell First time I saw your rig... wtf... why having the ext mics in front of the handles? After I got a matte box, it became obvious that the big flags block some sound. It made sense why you did that. After all, you are a sound engineer.
I disassembled my cage rig and assembled a shoulder rig by using the same blocks from BerkeySystem.
An ext mic sits between the handles. A preamp/mixer is a balance weight, too. Double support from a chest pad and a shoulder pad. It's well balanced. I like.
I used to joke about my dslr shopaholic symptom to my wife, "I will make sh!t load of money from taking video."
But average Joe can't keep buying. If I wanna continue to buy the latest and greatest gears, I gotta start generating revenue. My first goal is to earn $3000 to make up for all spending so far. Otherwise I will quit buying more... and even sell some gears such as a rig.
A few things I noticed.
First, a professional rig setup is important. I wouldn't wanna hire a pro photographer who shows up with his beloved GF1 and a pancake lens. I got pro looking gears... thanks to Cinematics matte box.
Second, a packaging is important. Great image quality is cool, but customers want professional packaging. Theme, storyline, text art, editing, etc. Where can I get more information about this?
Third, there is a major difference between pros and amateurs. Pros can get tax break on all gears they buy. That's a whopping 35~45% tax break on all business expenses. That's instant benefit of going pro with one's business license. But this is good only if there is revenue in the first place. No revenue? Then only post-tax money to buy gears.
@stonebat Are you planning to shoot weddings? if so, even if you work alone, 2-3 cameras are a must. You only need one pimped IMO. I film and record a lot of classical musicians and for them, as you say, having a nice deliverable seems to be 95% of the sale -- or as was my last big shoot, 95% of the fail because the singer complained that she looked "Old" on the DVD cover (it was her farewell concert) and from there she decided she looked "Old" in all the close ups and wanted the whole thing recut.
When I was in broadcast, the DVD seemed less important, I was always concerned about getting all the contact info printed in case the distros want to buy the show.
For my DVD's, is use an Epson Artisan 50 with outboard tanks so no worries about getting gouged by Staples on cartridges. It's a $99 printer and the CIS system is about $60. Some guys like to outsource their printing out. Use the glossy blank DVD's, not the matte. Tayo Yuden are excellent. DVD's I think are essential, a link to Youtube or Facebook doesn't create much value. A tangible thing you can hold in your hand and have for years is better.
I use the soft clear cases. Of course, avoid the hard plastic jewell cases that crack all the time. If burning blu ray, use the blue tinted soft case. Adds value. If transcoding to SD DVD, be sure you have a good software to do that. Virtual dub is a good freebie. A good cheapy is TMPGen. Don't use your NLE is you want the best results.
It's so hard to not buy more stuff I now have stuff I don't need and will have to sell it really has become ridiculous. I know what i need and am almost there, I just need to stop after that. I've only ever shot with super 8 super 16 PD150 PD170 and P2 rigs, the GH1 is my first dive into DSLR territory I believe it is the way forward for me, apart from actual film 16 and 35.
Finally I have a working set of gears and am selling rest of "trial" gears. My set is far from being the best gears, but I can work with it.
From this point I will buy new gadget just before I NEED it. Learn it quickly and use it immediately to maximize potential gain. I might run into supply scarcity issue... but I'm done with just-in-case purchasing.