Third Canon 7D Video Used as Promo Material
Watch captured highlights from a day of celebration, and read my thoughts behind-the-scenes and in retrospect.
AACIL – UM Art Collaborative Celebration, Shot on Canon 7D from Ted Chen on Vimeo.
After the recent release of Access magazine, the Ann Arbor CIL called me up to see if I was interested in covering their celebration event, which showcased the final works of a clay course. The course was held over several weeks in the fall, in collaboration with the University of Michigan.
Although I have been mulling over new video equipment for the past couple of weeks (was eyeing a viewfinder enlarger and some kind of stabilization system), financial constraints meant I would still shoot with the same Canon 7D and Rode Video Mic. Not that you can’t do a good job with it, but being hand-held, there is still some noticeable shake in the video.
One of the bigger problems from the day was the incredibly cacophonous background conversations. The exhibit area — where most of the video was shot — was no bigger than a conference room. With everyone trying to shout above each other and the walls echoing those voices, I might as well had been in a dance club. And here’s where I feel the Rode Video Mic performed admirably, picking up the interviewees voices above the din even though they were speaking to us in a low, muffled volume.
Solely relying on the 7D’s LCD screen to acquire pin-point focus is inadequate, I’ve come to realize. While the 7D screen is marvelous, it’s just too small. When I re-watch my video several times, I noticed the faces aren’t in exact focus (even though it’s close). I’ll need a viewfinder enlarger pretty soon, and I’m leaning heavily towards the LCDVF. I shot most of the video at f4, which doesn’t give thin depth-of-field at all, so it’s so hard to achieve focus accuracy at f4, imagine how bad it’ll be at f2.
I have to thank my colleague, Helen, for helping with asking the questions while I made sure everything was going right with the video recording. Hand-holding the camera requires deep concentration to keep it steady!
In case you’re wondering, the lenses used were:
Canon’s 24-105mm f4L
Sigma’s 15mm f2.8 fisheye
In future I definitely hope to have some kind of stabilization in place, and maybe I could try switching to prime lenses to get more separation between subject and background. But like I’ve said in all my previous video posts, photography is still number one for me, and should make sure it gets priority when it comes to gear. Good lenses can be used for either still or video, but stabilization is catered only for video and doesn’t help in still photography.



I recommend the Z finder – check out Philip Blooms posts if you havn’t already – he did a comparison and showed the benefits 0f the Z. I use one and love it – my only issue has been in hot clubs shooting music videos….it steamed up – but they warned me it would.
good luck,
…/Art Bell
Thanks for the recommendation – I’ve definitely heard of Bloom and the Z-Finder. While I’m sure the Z-finder is a good product, I just can’t justify paying the price. Maybe I’m just not at financial point where I can pay for more expensive accessories. For my uses the LCDVF should be good enough, at least I hope.
There’s something about Zacuto I don’t like – it’s overpriced in my opinion. Bloom looks like a swell guy and I respect him as a filmmaker, but I feel sad that he’s become associated to Zacuto, almost like an ‘endorser.’
Oh I forgot to mention that I looked at your studio website…very inspirational work! Awesome