Canon XL1 3CCD manual Composition

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Manual Focus Æ Turn the ring anti‐clockwise for closer objects and clockwise for objects that are further away.

COMPOSITION

FRAMING

It is very important to adhere to framings in a piece. Consistency between framings is crucial. In other words, keep your close‐ups, mediums and wides, etc. the same throughout your piece.

1. Extreme Close‐Up

In this shot the subject fills the frame

Convention holds that the distance between the mouth and the bottom of the frame be greater than the distance between the eyes and the top of the frame (i.e. more chin than brow should show).

This type of look creates connotations of a large personality, and lends an intensity to the picture.

Overall an atmosphere of power is created.

If this shot were to be reversed with the forehead being more prominent, the opposite effect would be achieved.

2.Medium

In this shot there’s more space at the bottom than at the top of the frame

This type of shot generally validates the subject more

If this shot was reversed with less space at the bottom and more at the top, then the opposite effect would be achieved: the subject would look weaker and more subservient.

Be careful to make sure there is some headroom in these shots though

MOVEMENT

When moving within a shot it’s a good idea to start slow, speed up, and end slow

Æthis allows you to accommodate for any changes that may occur. It is also important to speed up your shot over any boring bits and rather keep it slower during interesting bits. Make sure you go slow enough to keep the interesting bits in so as to cover the boring bits, then zip past the boring bits and go slow on the interesting bits.

This applies to all movements, such as pans

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Contents How it works FeaturesCool stuff to play with and use Page Tips & Terminology Depth of Field Focus Composition Tip Video Audio Control HardwareRCA XLR Audio Paths Video PathsRifle Mic SoundMaking the Mic Stereo Shure MixerDigital Audio Recording XL1 Audio GuideDigital audio modes on the XL1 Digital FeaturesProcedure Lighting Page NEW Terms Tips Video Compression CompressionDVD Formats Features of CompressionHuman Senses FundamentalsInternet Formats Mobile DevicesTypes of Compression HOW Compression WorksColour Modes Frame Types and CompressionColour Depths Colour Sampling Sample Used Sufficient for Audio CompressionBIT Depth DVD, DATChannels Page Page Signal Formats and Cables Page ANALOG‐TO‐DV Converters Digital formats Choosing the right capture codec Exporting video Understanding preprocessing Deinterlacing video Scaling Encoding Page Adjusting the frame rate Negotiating Frame Dropping Choosing a compression format Windows media players Windows media audio Wma codecs RealMedia Video Codecs PNG IMA Extras