Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - Camera shake skills in post-production of film and television?

Camera shake skills in post-production of film and television?

Shake lens technique

This lens technology was pioneered by French photographer Dixon in 1896, and also developed according to people's visual habits. When using the panning technology, the position of the camera does not move, and the lens changes the shooting direction, which is very similar to when we stand still and turn our heads to see things.

There are several types of panning lenses, which can swing left and right, up and down, tilt or mix with moving lenses. The function of panning is to let the audience show the scenes to be shown one by one. Slow panning skills can also cause prolonged space-time effects and give people an impression.

Shake the lens to show the content from beginning to end in one go, so it is required that the purpose of the lens picture at the beginning and end of the film is clear, and a series of processes between the two lenses should also be the content to be shown. Moving the telephoto lens away from the subject will also cause lateral movement or lifting.

The movement speed of the pan/tilt lens must be uniform. When it starts, it will stagnate for a moment, then gradually accelerate, decelerate at a uniform speed, and then stagnate, and the left picture will be slow.