PostHeaderIcon Best Wishes to Shooters in 2010!

First day of the first month of the new decade. Time to think a little bit more perhaps about our priorities in life, our relationships with the important people in our lives, and to a lesser extent with our craft and careers.

Regardless of the current state of the economy, which is dismal for many of us, the changes in technology in cameras and image acquisition are rattling more than a few of our collective cages. Last Monday night on December 28 I presented my heretical thoughts to a ribald group of 110 shooters and presumably interested attendees at Birns & Sawyer in Hollywood CA. Sure we talked about the new gear and lenses as Doug Leighton from Panasonic and Joe Patton from Canon described their respective wares.

The real issue that seemed to dominate the collective discussion, however, had little to do with the physical tools of the trade but the reality of necessarily adapting to the transforming workplace. Many comments from the group expressed support for all things 3D, a notion apparently shaped by the current studios’ increased demand for 3D content. The crowd suggested that 3D capture could become the norm for many shooters in the coming year.

For general live-action titles I’m not sure 3D will ever become more than a minor niche player. One reason is the current requirement that audiences don specialized headgear which interferes with the immersive quality of the cinema.  In the future, halographic technology may very well obviate the need for intrusive glasses. But we’re not there yet.

Some members of the Hollywood group took exception with what they perceived as my anti-super high resolution bias; the feeling no doubt fueled by the less than flattering comments for higher and higher resolution capture devices like the RED One and Epic. My contention was and continues to be that the current Resolution Religion permeating our ranks is fundamentally flawed, when in fact what shooters ought to be demanding is Performance, Performance, Performance, and not Resolution, Resolution, Resolution, which is after all but one measure of a camera’s performance.

Low-light sensitivity, dynamic range, ergonomics, ruggedness of hardware, optics, and appropriateness for the story at hand, should be at the forefront of every shooter’s consciousness, and not merely the number of pixels that can be jammed into a poorly performing albeit cheap CMOS imager the size of a battleship.

Let’s continue in the new year to seek gear with superior performance that can help us garner greater employment and plum assignments. I don’t deny that very high resolution image capture can be advantageous in some applications. Just let us not make it the only point of discussion because it doesn’t serve us well either economically or in terms of our craft, which after all requires maximum versatility and performance in the current highly constrained business environment.

11 Responses to “Best Wishes to Shooters in 2010!”

  • Theodore Demekus says:

    Hear, hear! Why should resolution be the single most important criteria when there are so many other considerations for the shooter? Thanks for going against the lazy thinking that too often prevails.

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  • savecoco says:

    I didn’t understand the concluding part of your article, could you please explain it more?

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  • admin says:

    The matter of using the right tool for the job involves more than simply the number of pixels in a camera sensor. The camera is a personal storytelling tool that the shooter must integrate into his or her craft with skill and good sense. Blindly looking at a single attribute like a sensor’s native resolution makes no sense since audiences respond most of all to the quality and appropriateness of one’s images as demanded by the story context, and not simply the imager size, pixel count, color space, compression ratios and all the rest. The usability and performance of one’s camera is paramount; the technical considerations of the tool are only relevant insofar as they impact the effectiveness of one’s visual storytelling.

  • Simon says:

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  • Patrick says:

    Hear, hear! Why should resolution be the single most important criteria when there are so many other considerations for the shooter? Thanks for going against the lazy thinking that too often prevails.

  • Ian says:

    The matter of using the right tool for the job involves more than simply the number of pixels in a camera sensor. The camera is a personal storytelling tool that the shooter must integrate into his or her craft with skill and good sense. Blindly looking at a single attribute like a sensor’s native resolution makes no sense since audiences respond most of all to the quality and appropriateness of one’s images as demanded by the story context, and not simply the imager size, pixel count, color space, compression ratios and all the rest. The usability and performance of one’s camera is paramount; the technical considerations of the tool are only relevant insofar as they impact the effectiveness of one’s visual storytelling.

  • Denny Dworak says:

    This is a good post, but I was wondering how do I suscribe to the RSS feed?

  • admin says:

    Denny
    To receive the RSS feed please click on the red icon at the bottom left of the Home page. Thanks.
    Barry

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