I thought I could get around those problems by making a camera mount that would dangle from the line like a ski lift chair. That way the camera would always be level with the horizon. To get it closer to the action I would "rappel" it about halfway down one of the front lines of the kite.
I tried it yesterday on the ocean but it didn't work very well because it jiggled and rocked back and forth too much, and sometimes even spun 360s around the line. Even after image stablization in iMovie, the footage is pretty much unwatchable. It might be good for still shots, but I think that's about it.
Special Kite Mount from James Douglass on Vimeo.
I'll try again with extensions under the camera so it dangles lower, but I think that will just make the period of the rocking longer. The next thing to try will be a more fixed mount that spans across both the front lines. That will have the same tilting problem as mounting directly to the kite, but at least I will be able to get the camera closer.
4 comments:
Looked better than I thought it would based on your description. The camera jiggles almost keep time with the music. Don't let that expensive thing fall off and be lost.
That was actually quite entertaining, thanks for sharing :) did you want it to be closer to you that camrig (www.camrig.com)?
Nice video but the motion did give me a bit of a headache lol.
WOO HOO! The 'Dude' makes a cameo - both on and off the water!
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