I think the Sigma 18-35 F1.8 EF deserves a video of it's own. I've shot a feature film on one of those (except maybe 10%.) They're APSC but who cares. Put a speed booster on it if you have a BMPCC4K and now you have a F0.9 lens and Kubrick loves you. Super sharp and not crazy expensive.
@@wolfcrowBrother, I want to make a film so that it can be released in theatres and I have a Sony FX6 cinema camera so which lens will be good for it so that it gives a cinematic effect??
The lens you identified as a “broadcast television lens” at 10:40 is actually called a BOX LENS. Those Canon CineServo lenses are also “broadcast lenses”, they’re only referred to as “cine” because they cover the super 35 format.
9:50 Before Laowa made its "lens probe" fashionable, there was a similar system called "Frazier lens". The difference is that this lens allows you to shoot at a different angles (generally 45%) and also generates a huge depth of field (something that modern "probe lenses" cannot do). It's similar to a periscope, was used a lot in the 80s and 90s, especially in advertising and science programs, where special camera framing or movements were required (the lens itself can rotate, without moving the camera). There are still some in the equipment rental stores. (there is a similar system called "Borescope T-Rex")
Could anyone tell how should i study filmmaking with 9-5 job, How should i spend time effectively and how many films should i watch per day to understand the craft.. Thanks in Advance
I think the Sigma 18-35 F1.8 EF deserves a video of it's own.
I've shot a feature film on one of those (except maybe 10%.)
They're APSC but who cares.
Put a speed booster on it if you have a BMPCC4K and now you have a F0.9 lens and Kubrick loves you.
Super sharp and not crazy expensive.
😮
there are many famous lenses/designs: Dallmeyer planars, Trioplan, Biotar, Tessars, etc
"Omg....what types to use for my first feature film"
This is a very helpful primer and overview. Thanks for posting.
You're very welcome!
I love the website eyecandy, but having wolfcrow explaining them makes it even better!
Thank you!
@@wolfcrowBrother, I want to make a film so that it can be released in theatres and I have a Sony FX6 cinema camera so which lens will be good for it so that it gives a cinematic effect??
3:25 I'm not seeing the link to the video on anamorphic lenses...? What's the title of the video in your library?
The lens you identified as a “broadcast television lens” at 10:40 is actually called a BOX LENS. Those Canon CineServo lenses are also “broadcast lenses”, they’re only referred to as “cine” because they cover the super 35 format.
great video, what's being filmed with metadata lenses at 10:15 ?
9:50 Before Laowa made its "lens probe" fashionable, there was a similar system called "Frazier lens". The difference is that this lens allows you to shoot at a different angles (generally 45%) and also generates a huge depth of field (something that modern "probe lenses" cannot do). It's similar to a periscope, was used a lot in the 80s and 90s, especially in advertising and science programs, where special camera framing or movements were required (the lens itself can rotate, without moving the camera). There are still some in the equipment rental stores.
(there is a similar system called "Borescope T-Rex")
Damn
Never knew about 50 shades of cine lenses
amazing content
#51 Broken Lenses - For the ones that never made it back home.😭
A complete guide to lenses but without order or taxonomy
Great survey
0:57 which film
From which movie are the opening shots of the video?
what's a diffusion lens!!? Never heard of that before
Could anyone tell how should i study filmmaking with 9-5 job, How should i spend time effectively and how many films should i watch per day to understand the craft.. Thanks in Advance
second video of yours with no anamorphic video linked in description
Sir, I don't have a PayPal. pls, add stripe/razorpay for the payment option.
❤❤
bruh even with arri cam, india still looks poor and dressed poorly too