Fri Aug 23, 2013 5:36 pm
I agree. S16 is a great format. I started out with a Bolex, 16mm. Frank nailed it, when you compare digital to film, you only got 10-min on a roll (or 30min max, with an extended mag), you had to check film gate after every take to ck for dust, etc. and reload batteries. So now, reload a SD card or SSD (very quick compared to reloading a film cam), and stick in a new battery. For longer time shoots, you can always use an ext. battery. I had to do this with my XL2 running a pro B&W viewfinder, no big deal.
As for lens selection, the Academy 16x9 crop of S16 lists 8.3-12mm as "wide", 17mm normal, 29-46 Short Tele, 62-103 Mid Tele. So a 12mm SLR Magic, a great lens for the PPC, gives same view as a 25mm on a 4/3rds, 35mm on Super 35 (normal lens) and 50mm on Still 135 camera. Learn to use this reference and think of lens focal length from the perspective of the format you are Using. Forget crop factors--think like a DoP. I went from 16mm to pro video (standard was a 2/3rds sensor), I did not go back and forth trying to figure out a focal length based on 135mm film. In 2/3rds, 13.3mm was normal "50mm/35mm/30mm... going down in format from 135 standard" view (this was picked as it offers similar perspective to human vision looking ahead at a scene). If you want a long tele shot, work from this "normal focal length" point, go to longer focal,length to give the look you want. Same goes for wide angle. Very few shots call for something wider than 7 or 8mm in S16 (which would be 20/24mm in 135)
A 8mm Rininon or 8mm S16 lens is fairly wide for most situations. I am starting with a basic kit 12mm, 17mm, 25mm, and 45mm. This should cover most situations. I also have two zooms, 11-16 Tokina (very big) and Leica 12-50mm 4/3rd zoom (a little smaller/lighter, but still "big" 72mm front ring.
Learn to think "inside" the box you are using, not "outside"
Last edited by
Denny Smith on Fri Aug 23, 2013 6:00 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Denny Smith
SHA Productions