I want to film someone welding.
I am concerned about the bight weld arc light, and sparks that might find there way to my lens.
any suggestion.
Probably best to film far away.
I was always told not to look at someone welding, as it might hurt your eyes.
Thanks, Jeff
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08-17-2012 08:12 AM
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08-17-2012 08:33 AM
For starters, wear what the welders wear. They obviously need to see what they are doing, but they need to wear protective gear to do it.
Or use a camera you can remote-control from another room...
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08-17-2012 09:00 AM
It depends upon the type of welding. TIG welding is splatter and mostly smoke free. You can get close with no issues. Arc welding is very smokey, noisy, and has molten metal splashing out quite a ways. It will damage your camera if the embers get on it. MIG is somewhat in between the two. Torch welding is quiet and generally does not splash embers.
Welding (not torch) puts out a very broad spectrum of energy waves. It will give you a sunburn if you're not covered. It may affect the performance of your equipment.
It will blind you if you don't wear welder's helmet.
If you set the exposure to see the welder, you will not see anything but a bright light for the welding. If you set the exposure for the welding, everything else will be black.
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08-17-2012 09:17 AM
When I did "Man of Steel" I had some welding shots in it TIG and torch.
I took a 120mm lens and went far enough away - problem solved (if you have room for that)
Otherwise, at least mount a clear, pola or UV filter on the lens.
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08-17-2012 09:27 AM
Good advice from Postmaster. Don't be too close. As far as shooting, throw some light on the welder (if inside) so when you stop down, you can still see the welder. Outside should be no problem if you are shooting in full sun. Inside I shoot a lot of tight shots of just the welding and mask. The glow from the welding should be enough tp light up the welders mask. Can be very pretty. If you are looking through the viewfinder, you're just watching TV, you won't hurt your eyes.
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08-17-2012 12:01 PM
Thank you, and yes of course I would have a helmet. But one of my questions, is will it hurt the camera lens because it will be pointed at very bright light. For example, it is a bad idea to point your camera and film the sun.
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08-17-2012 12:56 PM
frankglencairn.wordpress.com
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08-17-2012 02:27 PM
If shooting welding hurt video cameras, you would never see any footage of welding. No, back in the dark ages when cameras had tubes shooting welding was riskier because bright lights could burn a saticon or plumbicon tube -- and they were expensive. Chips (CCDs) changes all of that. Now I wouldn't let it stay motionless on welding for an hour, but regular shooting, no problem.
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08-17-2012 04:23 PM
I have shot a ton of welding operations of every conceivable type of welding, back when I was working for one of the larger aerospace companies.
First off, smaller more compact "camcorders" are probably the best bet as they won't get in the way as much.
If you MUST be in the booth, ALWAYS wear a welders mask when working anywheres near that operation. ALWAYS work extremely closely with the welderin setting up the shot and what and where will be shot.
DO NOT take any unnecessary risks--like looking at the operation in progress to confirm you are getting the shot "just for a minute".
Remember safety must always come first, the welder's as well as your own. So give the welder enough space, do not hover too close. Be careful to set your shot up before the welder's mask (and YOURS!!!) goes down because it will likely be very hard for you to see well enough to correctly frame a shot.
The very best advice is to set up your shot with the camera on a solid tripod, not too close to the welder. Need two angles? Use two cameras. Don't get in his way. Then when the operation starts, you leave the welding booth until he is done. That way you get your shot plus keep your vision.Last edited by sewolla; 08-17-2012 at 04:35 PM. Reason: added info
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09-08-2012 10:44 AM
I shot some welding and metalwork with my DVX-100a a few years ago - (I have since upgraded to the HMC-150 but haven't shot any metalwork with it yet). I found that using a large amount of natural light worked well so that you can expose the subject but still see the welding arc... In a dim room you might have some exposure issues since the arc is so bright and light might be low depending on the work environment. This video is pretty old, but you can check it out here: https://vimeo.com/6635781
When I shot this, I looked only at the LCD - NEVER, EVER at the arc.. In my opinion you should be able to get away without a welding mask if you aren't looking at the arc AT ALL.. but others may be correct in telling you to wear a mask. For that shoot I was roaming at least 8 feet away from the welding at all times and relied on telephoto to get the close ups. Hopefully you can excuse the annoying pull zooms - I was still learning how to shoot at that point.
Good luck with the shoot - welding is always cool to shoot, just be safe!




Is there any tricks to film someone welding?


