Stormy Weather
Stormy Weather
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Stormy Weather $24.99 Stormy Weather Photographic Print by H. Armstrong Roberts. Product size approximately 12 x 16 inches. Available at Art.com. Embrace your Space – your source for high quality fine art posters and prints. |

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Ada Brown Refrigerator Magnet $2.00 This magnet features an image of Ada Brown singing “That Ain’t Right” with Fats Waller in the 1943 movie musical classic Stormy Weather… |
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Cab Calloway’s Swingin’ Magnet $2.00 This magnet features a swingin’ image of Cab Calloway from the 1943 movie Stormy Weather… |
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Fats Waller Magnet $2.00 This magnet features Fats Waller, from his 1943 performance of his signature song “Ain’t Misbehavin’” in the Stormy Weather movie… |
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At Last! $2.39 14 tracks with reissue bonus tracks. Small light scuff on disc will not affect play…. |
All I Did Was Slap This Footage Together, Which Came Straight Out Of The Camera, No Fades, Filters, Or Effects For This Canon 60d Test
I decided to do the test on the awesome 60d. The theme of this dark time-lapse is the zombie Apocalypse. The idea was to go from day to the black of a stormy day, almost like night. I was not really doing a Canon 60d test here, I was shooting some footage for my new zombie movie, on the 60d.
But let me turn the table again and call it a Canon 60d test: any time lapse is like a test, the photographer is at the mercy of the elements. How come? You just do not ever know exactly what a time lapse will produce. Its the surprise effect that I like which makes it fun. The end result always surprises me even when I plan it out.
Darkness and danger is descending upon the town in this Canon 60d test, it like the approaching apocalypse. Soon Zombies will infest the streets.
This is raw footage. All I did was slap this footage together, which came straight out of the camera, no fades, filters, or effects. I learned how to do it this way thirty years ago. It simply better and quicker and easier to do things in camera. Its old school. What can be done in camera, really should be done in camera if at all possible. It took three storms to create this short footage in this Canon 60d test. You need quite a bit of old fashioned patience to do these Time lapses. All I needed to do to get the right atmosphere was get the right manual aperture.
What you are seeing in this compressed version is not the true HD quality by a long shot. The finished project will look great on the biggest screen, I guarantee that. Pay attention to the nasty time lapse flicker. That’s why I say every time lapse is like a Canon 60d test. Sometimes you get flicker, sometimes you don't. My suggestion to reduce the flicker is to use one exposure for every one second interval.
The problem is the DSLR camera I think, but don’t ask me why, and also the fact that light is actually changing every second, but our eyes can not perceive these changes, when the camera can. This is not a bad Canon 60d test, but the file is compressed, the blacks are noisy, and later, in the fished product, I would match the colors, contrast, and brightness, and crush the blacks a, but you get the idea. Learn more about Time lapse and the Canon 60d intervalometer here.
So here is Canon 60d test footage:
If you like, find more cool footage and read my scary Canon 60d review here now!