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Behind The Scenes at Briuns Hockey with HD SuperMo
This is the third blog I have written on the Sony HDC-3300 HD Super Motion camera. I just find it an amazing piece of technology. Expensive technology, at almost $130,000 new! I brought my little Sony HDR-HC3 HDV camcorder to work today and shot a quick and dirty behind the scenes at Boston Bruins Hockey. I talk all about the Sony HDC-3300. 12 comments to Behind The Scenes at Briuns Hockey with HD SuperMo |
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Copyright © 2012 Tom Guilmette - All Rights Reserved |
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Hell! You are Fantastic!
I wish I would be as good as you are…
Thanks for sharing!
That was great!
Behind the scenes access, well done Tom, thanks so much!
Great Job explaining the camera Tom .You packaged it nicely . I learned something today !
@olimpiu and Andrew: Thanks, I hope to do more.
@PG: I did not really touch upon audio, perhaps you could guest star in one of my behind the scenes?
This might be my first comment on your blog but I check it all the time.
I absolutely love all the inside info, keep it coming!
Nice Tom, did you know that EVS is a belgian company?
Hey Tom! I will definitely share this with some of my co-workers in Chicago. I knew from the first day I met you (what, like 12 or so years ago?) how talented and motivated you are! Excellent work.
@admin: Audio isn’t as glamorous as video. Working A2 and mic’ing many arenas/stadiums/fields I can say that a behind the scene look would probably bore your readers to death!
@Nathan: EVS aka “Elvis” was actually developed to record parts coming down a production line in a fabrication environment. Some genius saw it could be used in production environments.
i have hung around with the audio guys. i’m telling you they are a colorful bunch!
wow, thanks for sharing that. that was pretty sweet to see how all that works. at 100% it’s almost to fast when you’re that close.
that puck does move fast! but i can follow it because of the ergonomics of the sony hand held camera and the sharpness of the hdvf-20a sony crt black and white viewfinder.
So THAT’s how they get those high frame rate slo-mo feeds! Been wondering that for years.