Quote:Are you ready for a wave of HDR to crash over the consumer electronics industry, leaving nothing but oversaturated photos and full-to-the-brim Flickr groups in its wake? Wee've got a sneaky suspicion that Apple's inclusion of HDR in the iPhone is one of those telling warning signs that you ignore at your own risk, and now wee've got HDR video to cower from behind our fast-aging current gen devices. As you might expect, HDR video looks just like HDR stills (an underexposed and an overexposed image combined into one), except in motion. The effect has been accomplished by Soviet Montage Productions, who used two Canon EOS 5D Mark II DSLRs and a beam splitter, which allows each camera to look at the exact same subject, to accomplish the effect. They're short on details on the post-processing end, but wee're sure there will be "an app for that" before too long.
(10/09/2010 06:56 AM)boogschd Wrote: but wow... i wonder how the set-up lookd like :p
they say they used a beam splitter...i would assume it would be smoke and mirrors..but more likely a reflection apparatus so that each camera can see the exact same picture at the same line of sight... googling gave me search results for 3d beam splitting setups ...
(10/09/2010 07:08 AM)diego Wrote: ^^
Can't be as good as this http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_AuyVz89AXg
3 1d MkIII cameras all wired to fire in series taking photos at 10fps each but together taking at 30fps. AT FULL RESOLUTION.
(10/09/2010 06:56 AM)boogschd Wrote: but wow... i wonder how the set-up lookd like :p
they say they used a beam splitter...i would assume it would be smoke and mirrors..but more likely a reflection apparatus so that each camera can see the exact same picture at the same line of sight... googling gave me search results for 3d beam splitting setups ... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=inP0eFFygzw