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#1
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I just watched guy in a movie "zoom in" with a Canon 500mm f/4.0 lens...
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#2
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I just watched guy in a movie "zoom in" with a Canon 500mm f/4.0 lens...
In article , Ken Hart
wrote: I have the Canon 500mm f/5.6 FL-F lens. The only way to "zoom" with that lens is with your feet. moving with your feet is not 'zooming' and changes the perspective. |
#3
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I just watched guy in a movie "zoom in" with a Canon 500mm f/4.0 lens...
In article , nospam
wrote: moving with your feet is not 'zooming' and changes the perspective. I rather suspect anyone reading these posts knows that. The key phrase was "in a movie." The OP was pointing out how little people in the movie business seem to care for how their props would actually be used. Matter of fact, there's a guy posting on YouTube specifically on how cameras are or are not used correctly on screen. Most recently, he decided that a very obscure Brooke Veriwide was indeed used correctly in "Ghostbusters II" |
#4
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I just watched guy in a movie "zoom in" with a Canon 500mm f/4.0 lens...
In article , Scott Schuckert
wrote: moving with your feet is not 'zooming' and changes the perspective. I rather suspect anyone reading these posts knows that. doubtful. there are a lot of myths that still live on. many photographers incorrectly assume that a wide angle, normal and a telephoto lens create different perspectives simply by virtue of having different focal lengths, and that someone can 'zoom' with their feet instead of turning a ring on the lens or pressing a button on the camera and get the same results. that is, of course, completely false. The key phrase was "in a movie." The OP was pointing out how little people in the movie business seem to care for how their props would actually be used. Matter of fact, there's a guy posting on YouTube specifically on how cameras are or are not used correctly on screen. Most recently, he decided that a very obscure Brooke Veriwide was indeed used correctly in "Ghostbusters II" lots of things in movies aren't entirely correct. one of the more amusing ones is trying to crack a password one character at a time. encryption doesn't work that way. |
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