Created another video to thank the Smithsonian. Someone here mentioned a wider shot of the Big E so here it is in all it's non Optical Printer'd glory.
Spockboy
Looks great! How did you change Khan's ship, is it CGI or the original model "cleaned up?"
If I was re-shooting the model myself, I would use the same lens and focal length I needed in order to match the original look.
How do you determine that?
Doug Drexler would probably know. He did something with STC's cgi Enterprise to make it look like it was filmed the same way as the original. Or something like that. :/Lenses would be a matter of research. I'm sure someone has it written down somewhere what type of lenses and cameras were used by the Howard Anderson company back in 66. Once you had that as a starting point, you could easily experiment by superimposing the shot (as I did) until you found the correct focal length. I'm sure they used pretty standard lenses as it was made for television.
Spockboy
He sized his CGI model to 11 feet and created a virtual camera which duplicated the camera and lens used in the original filming. For extra realism he kept the camera/model movement limited to what the original rig would allow.Doug Drexler would probably know. He did something with STC's cgi Enterprise to make it look like it was filmed the same way as the original. Or something like that. :/
Doug Drexler would probably know. He did something with STC's cgi Enterprise to make it look like it was filmed the same way as the original. Or something like that. :/
Yes, that's what I remembered. Thanks.He sized his CGI model to 11 feet and created a virtual camera which duplicated the camera and lens used in the original filming. For extra realism he kept the camera/model movement limited to what the original rig would allow.
There is a video out there somewhere where he describes what he did step by step.
http://trekmovie.com/2013/05/14/dou...-to-star-trek-continues-exclusive-first-look/However, Drexler did have some conditions. Doug was determined to have the effects work match that which could be done in 1970. That mean "no motion control-style shots, no wild maneuvers, no enhancing the ship with surface detail (aztec’ing) that was never there, no raking light, lots of fill, grain, and etc." So Drexler has done his digital work as if it were being done on stage half a century ago, down to duplicating the lenses and lighting setups of the era. Drexler even made his CG model of the Enterprise 11.5 feet long. The artist explains "Everybody builds their ship at 947′. At that gigantor size it’s never going to behave like it did when we first fell in love with it. The difference in the lens distortion alone makes it a non-starter."
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