You would need the original files.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Good cameras, you take em out the box, hit record and get nice stuff that plops into post and does what you want. The donkeys take years to learn.
One good reason to splash out on a top end camera.
If you do get an Alexa further down the road, you will have invested almost nothing in this camera and probably picked up the necessary support equipment you can use later when moving up the food chain...
Great advice from yoclay so far--best ever-- but the above statement has always bothered me. Esp. the part about "moving up the food chain".
I just hate it.
It makes me sound like I'm a wannabe cinematographer or gun-for-hire hack. I regard myself as an amateur filmmaker seeking the advice of experienced camera guy professionals--like you guys. (Although some of you might be hacks, LOL)
Difference.
Scrolling through long complex menus on a Sony for instance becomes a deficit.
There's a lot to unpack in your comments (thanks for that) but this made me laugh because I've seen the menus for the F3--it looks like Space Invaders from 1980. This alone is worth 38K to get rid of.
Ive been doing a shot today on my FS7.. it is looking great.. but every time I put a card in or out it asks me to reconfigure the card, the camera then asks for APR - its about 10 button presses to get the thing working. And (im doing some slomo shots) scrubbing through to 'the good bit' is taking hours - so a camera that is nice to use would be above the FS7 - I dont actually know if the alexa is nice to use.. like intuitive to scrub through a long slo-motion take.
Also the HFR (above 72FPS is looking crap on the FS7) - 4k/50 is looking sweet.
S
Ok. The cost of rigging an F3 and dealing with the menus is about the same as the loss I would take buying (and later reselling) an Amira.
So you disagree with my logic, and you think renting a camera for a week or whatever will produce better results in the end?
Couldn't disagree harder.
Being a cinematographer is a specialized skill and you guys seem to be very particular about images.
I wonder what some of you would do if we were filming a scene in a restaurant, you were standing beside me and I said, "The 50 ain't cutting it, get the 416."
Would you even know wtf I'm talking about?
I might be a neophyte but there's more to it.
I prefer the CMC641 and that it is probably more appropriate because of the height of the ceilings and the quantity of reflections. And then I might even consider tightening up the shot so that the guy on the boom could get a little closer.
So you disagree with my logic, and you think renting a camera for a week or whatever will produce better results in the end?
Only after I stop beating my girlfriend.
Wtf?
Are you trying to make some syllogistic point? I don't get it.