A few days ago, I went to old Midvale with my friend Joey
Sanchez to do some location scouting and video tests my next film TOE TAG. The Vincent’s Pharmacy,
featured in these shots, was in The
Sandlot.
Joey Sanchez sneaking
around back alleys in old Midvale.
Yesterday, my friend Geoff Richards and I used our lunch to
get some more test shots in and around the business complex we work at. This
test was primarily more for me to get used to the Chung Dha-style monopod rig
(which I’ll get to further down).
Geoff Richards lurking
around in underground tunnels and parking garages in Salt Lake City.
These shots aren’t bad considering I shot them on an iPhone
6. I’ll likely be using this old phone for TOE TAG and possibly the 48 Hour
Film Project unless I can manage an upgrade to the 7 before then… though
unlikely.
Chung Dha-style
Monopod Rig
I don’t have much money to spend on equipment, so I often
try to figure out the best way to get the most out of what I have by using
technique to steady and light my shots. I’ve adopted a modified Cinema Verite
method- using available lighting and augmenting it with inexpensive portable
lights. I also try to figure out the best way to grip my camera with what I
already own using very unconventional means.
I like DIY, but there are too many things- like making stuff
out of pvc pipe, is just a waste of time and looks ghetto trashy. I mean, come
on, use your time to plan movies, not making shitty gear.
I had come up with this method on my own, but it turns out I
wasn’t the first to think of using a monopod this way. In 2010, Chung Dha came
up with a fantastic method and setup using a collapsed monopod with a ballhead
camera mount as a shoulder rig.
Chung Dha’s 2010 demo
of his monopod shoulder rig.
Using a speedlight extension bar to extend handling is
clever, though I am using an ALM mCAMLITE iPhone case, which has a similar set
up on the bottom. I also use the small handle from my Zoom H4N kit for
additional handling.
Photos coming soon!
My ALM mCAMLITE Quick
Rig: transforms from a shoulder-rig to a monopod set up in 5 seconds.
I already owned the monopod, but I decided to take some
birthday money to buy a better support for the heavy mCAMLITE case, for which I
bought a fluid-filled tripod head from Anovor, using a Desmond 1/4” to 3/8”
adapter.
It works pretty good, though it will take practice to get
more fluid shots.
To be honest, I like the challenge of using an iPhone. It
limits me in many ways, forcing me to become creative with my shots.
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