Posts Tagged: video


2
Sep 11

DIY HDSLR : How to make your own video camera slider / dolly

make your own DIY camera sliderIf you, like me have recently gotten into video production thanks to the awesome new generation of Digital SLRs – the Canon 5D mkII, the 550D and the Nikon D700 to name a few – then you’ll likely have faced some of the challenges in getting them to play nice with existing filming conventions. One source of inspiration for such things has been Philip Bloom’s awesome blog – check that out for sure. Now I’ve pimped Bloom, let’s get to the point!

I was doing a video shoot for my job (I work for Unity Technologies, developer of Unity Game Engine) and I needed to get some nice slider shots in addition to standard piece to camera static tripod shots. So I looked into my options and discovered rather few… Many folks online are ‘rolling their own solution and it struck me that there is the high end of the market – Kessler Crane’s Pocket Dolly series, and the more affordable Scottish developed ‘Glidetrack’ – RRP around £200 btw. In a rush I nearly bought a Glidetrack – but after calling, tweeting and emailing asking to buy one direct, with no response, I resolved to simply rent one from a local hire company in London. This cost around £50 for the day plus insurance, and the results were, in short, very disappointing. Having little experience in operating a slider or dolly was likely a hindrance, but the main this that struck me about the Glidetrack was the inability to control or dampen movement.. maybe its my arthritis ridden hands from a youth spent gaming, but I found it tough to operate.

So, with Kessler’s products starting at around £600 with shipping, despite their perfection – I resolved to find my own solution. I’ve seen many folks using various means of building their own slider, but I don’t have much of an engineering background, or access to a friend or place that has the right kind of parts.

Then, whilst visiting my dad I noticed an old rowing machine (A York Fitness R510) I knew for a fact he’d neglected to set sail on for many a year, and he said I could happily butcher it to save him ‘a trip to the tip’. Cheers Dad! So armed with a hacksaw, some bolts and a set of allen keys, I set about turning a rowing machine, and an old tripod I never used anymore, into a slider! Here’s what I did!

Step 1 – Fitness be gone!

First off the end of the rowing machine that has the pulley and handles needed removing, along with the piston underneath. This reassuringly got rid of a good amount of the weight too, and the seat itself was simply to remove as its just two bolts that sit it onto the sliding plate.

remove the slider seat

You can see in the image above that the plate is neatly made of some skate-like wheels that run inside the metal housing of the runner of the machine, so it makes it very fit for purpose.

Step 2 – Ditch the stands

The last steps to creating this slider will be to add mounts for a tripod to fit at each end of the slider, so we have no use for the stands at each end that previously raised the rowing machine a foot off the floor, so time to unbolt and use force where necessary!

This leaves you with something like this -

make your own DIY camera slider

Step 3 – Tripod Hacking

Then came the problem of mounting a camera onto this otherwise flat panel. Having a few cheap old tripods around, I remembered one was in the garage and decided to use the two bolt holes that formerly held the seat in place to hold the tripod on top.

diy your own camera dolly dslr film making

I removed one tripod leg and flattened the other two, as well as sawing off the main shaft of the tripod that raises it up and down. The remaining two legs were cut down to size, and a pedestal drill was used to cut through, and I then bolted this onto the plate -

diy make your own slider with a rowing machine

Step 4 – Final tweaks

As for taking apart the rower.. that’s done and i’ve now got this -

how to make your own camera slider

So I’ve still yet to weld some metal plates on the bottom and mill a hole for a tripod bolt – I think this is a 1/4 inch whitworth hole – tested with another bolt and should be fine. Aside from that I can still use it at present and have made this quick test with my Canon 550D -

So current issues are:

  • Needs dampening as any imperfection of the rollers is transferred straight to camera
  • Still needs metal plates welding for tripod attach
  • The slider main part is slightly bowed, and needs twisting slightly to true it

More updates soon!


14
Mar 11

Canon T2i / 550D DSLR – How to get flat color for video

A slight departure from my usual work on tutorials for software, I made this tutorial on getting flat colour out of the Canon 550D / T2i. I started a site called ExposureHD.com but as yet haven’t had time to really expand upon it as I’ve been focused on working with Unity (game development software, and now my job!). This may well be useful also for the T3i as it is based upon the T2i but having not had a hands on with that model I cannot confirm nor deny whether the settings are in the same places still. Either way, have fun!

if you have not seen my tutorials before, have a look at my other sites, shown in the sidebar of my blog here >>


13
Aug 08

Randy Pausch’s Last Lecture

This is a little gem I came across on youtube – you may have already heard of it if you’re one of the 6 million people who have already watched it. Randy Pausch was a professor of engineering in the field of HCI and Virtual Reality, who sadly passed away from pancreatic cancer in july this year.

He gave this ‘last lecture’, which is semi autobiographical, but is also fascinating and inspiring for anyone interested in virtual environments, and general creative human computer interaction. It also has some familiar insight into the workings of academia and team based projects which some of you will find amusing.

I was skeptical upon discovering this video as it was titled ‘Achieving your childhood dreams’ – lots of awful self help books sprang to mind from my days as a Waterstones bookboy, but this is nothing of the cheesy sort – he discusses his childhood briefly before moving onto discussing his time in teaching. Pausch delivers the lecture with remarkable humor given his situation at the time (around 6 months prior to his death as predicted by his doctors) and I recommend you give it a watch, whilst being a good hour long its very interesting stuff indeed.

Read more about Professor Pausch here

Randy Pausch (1960 - 2008)

Randy Pausch (1960 - 2008)


28
May 08

Doritos Ad, Please Vote!

My good friends Matt and John made an awesome video for the doritos advert competition, and they’re currently in the final 5, and in my opinion stand a high chance of winning – no offence to the other competitors. Take a look at their ad called ‘Tribe’ and please vote for it by clicking here!


12
Dec 07

Unity3D Tutorials

For my Interactive Media Students, i’ve begun to work on the, as it turns out, gargantuan task of documenting my Unity3D lessons in video form. I’ve also created a Flash interface for you to view them in several parts, so that you can more easily skip ahead if you need to.

As i’m currently working on the interface for the video tutorials, I recommend you regularly hit Refresh on your browser each time you visit as i’ll be regularly building on whats there. To visit the latest beta of the tutorial interface, with.. (at the time of writing, 2am.. so tired..), most of the first Unity3D lesson available on it, click here