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  • DVX100b Newbie Questions

    Posted by Ruby Gold on June 29, 2006 at 10:43 pm

    I just got a 100b and did my first shoot with it yesterday–an interview. LOVE the camera, but have some questions I couldn’t find answers to in the manual or Green’s DVX Book, so I thought I’d try here. All input appreciated. First, the set-up:

    The interview was with an African-American woman with medium dark skin. I did a basic 4-point lighting set-up using an Omni for my key, a small Rifa for the fill, a Pro light for my hairlight and a Tota to throw light on the background. There was some cloudy daylight coming through frosted windows very high up in the wall. I manually white balanced with a white card, set the zebras at 85% and used them as my guide for the iris setting, which was around 6.8. I used manual focus. I used an external lav mic connected to input 2. Mic Gain level at -50dB, Mic ALC off.

    Questions:
    1. After looking at the footage, it seems that the tighter I went with the zoom, the more “rich” the color appears. When I was wider, it looked a little tiny bit washed out/overexposed compared to the tighter shots. Am I imagining this?

    2. Also, looking at the footage, it seems that when I went wider, I lost the sharpness of the focus ever so slightly. To set focus–I went in to Z99, focused and then pulled back out to however I wanted to frame the shot–does the focus not hold if you pull too far out? How does this work?

    3. No zebras, i.e. overexposure was registering, yet a couple of times the “ND filter 1/8” message popped on screen. What would cause this? Particularly if no overexposed areas are registering with the manual iris setting I chose based on zebras? Seemed very strange.

    4. The woman looks good, but she has hot (shiny-looking) spots in places on her face that didn’t show up as zebras when I was shooting, or just very, very minimally. I used face powder when I saw her looking shiny, but since the zebras weren’t registering, I figured I was okay. Yet, in this footage, these spots look really shiny–a little blown out. If they were–why didn’t the zebras show it? Could another issue be causing this problem? Any help here is greatly appreciated so I can correct for it in the next interview to be shot next week.

    5. I set audio levels to hover around -12dB, occasionally going into one or two red squares. When I captured the footage, the audio seems very low. Of course, better too low than blown out, but I’d prefer a a stronger level. Suggestions?

    6. Last but not least–should you set the Black Balance along with White Balance for each shoot?

    Thanks so much for any and all help.

    Ruby

    Bubba Frank replied 19 years, 10 months ago 2 Members · 1 Reply
  • 1 Reply
  • Bubba Frank

    July 8, 2006 at 1:34 am

    Possible Answer to question #5:

    Were you wearing headphones while you were recording as well? It may be possible that you were wearing very efficient headphones (earbuds tend to be pretty efficient), meaning that you wouldn’t have to increase the volume that much on your camera in order for you to listen to the audio at a comfortable level. This MAY have resulted in your computer playing back the tape at its ACTUAL low level, when in fact you were hearing it at a reasonable level through your camera’s headphones. I hope this makes sense to you, and good luck with getting answers for those other questions!

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