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Overcranking (Slow-Motion)

High-Speed Photography & Videography

This page includes contributions by Matt Gray.

Ordinary video is customarily 25 (Europe) or approximately 30 (USA) frames per second (fps). Slow-motion cinema, also known as overcranking, is achieved by using a special camera which can record events at higher frame rates, such as 1000fps. When this video is then played back at the usual frame rate, it appears slowed down.

Some practical options available to our class are:

  • Modern iPhones can achieve 240 frames per second.
  • We have two Edgertronics high-speed cameras, capable of up to 18,000 fps. This camera does 720p video at 1000 fps.

Because the exposure time of each frame is so short, high-frame-rate cameras generally require a lot of light. A lighting kit or bright sunshine is essential for good results with slow-motion cameras. For very high speed cameras, it is essential to have lights without any appreciable flickering.

Readings

Things to see and consider

  1. Edgerton Documentary developing strobe light & using it to capture fast movements
  2. Edgerton stroboscopy, 1940
  3. Slow-motion as an analytic tool for "microexpressions"

  1. Miscellaneous Slow-Motion Experiments on the Internet

Water balloon

Raspberry

--

  1. Bill Viola: The Passions, at the Getty

Bill Viola

Bill Viola, Six Heads

Bill Viola, The Dreamers

Bill Viola, The Dreamers

  1. Sam Taylor-Wood, Hysteria
    • In Sam Taylor-Wood's Hysteria (1997), a woman displays extreme emotions in slow-motion. "There are no sounds, so the viewer cannot be certain whether she is moved by joy, despair or both." Citation

Sam Taylor-Wood

  1. Rachel Talibart Uses high-speed photography and telephoto lenses to catch waves:

Rachael Talibart

  1. Guillaume Panariello

Panariello (music video)

  1. Adam Magyar, Stainless

Magyar

  1. Luke DuBois, Vertical Music (2012). A chamber piece written for 12 players, lasting 4 1/2 minutes. Each musician was filmed individually in several takes using a high-speed (300fps) camera and an extremely high definition (1 MHz) analog-to-digital audio recording setup. When played back at 30fps, total time is ~45 minutes.

Luke DuBois, Vertical Music


  1. Julien Maire, Double-Face and Ordonner

Julien Maire, Ordonner

  • French new-media artist Julien Maire plays fun on the concept of slow-motion cinema in these elaborately conceived simulacra, which are not actually presented in slow-motion. In one live performance (Ordonner), he heaves "heavy-looking" cardboard boxes which are in reality filled with helium balloons; their slow, gentle tumble through the air is a near-perfect imitation of slowmo video. In Maire's Double-Face performance, a coin tossed in the air tumbles ever more slowly until it eventually comes to a rest in mid-air; in fact, the coin is controlled by a mechatronic suspension system with nearly invisible guy-wires.
  • Double-Face
  • Ordonner

  1. The Dancing Pigeons, Ritalin (Music video, 2010) Ritalin by the Dancing Pigeons (Music video, 2010)

  1. Steve Giralt, Burger Assembly (slow-mo plus robot arm) Vimeo Burger by Steve Giralt

Springtail insects

Springtail Collembole insects, via BBC

Springtails on BBC

The Visual Microphone: Passive Recovery of Sound from Video

The Visual Microphone: Passive Recovery of Sound from Video

Bullets colliding (at 1M fps)

Some Really Really Fast Cameras

Audio

Special things happen to sound when it is slowed down and time-stretched. The best-known example of this is the "800% slower" Justin Bieber track, U Smile. Note that the time-stretching preserves the original frequences of the audio, rather than causing the pitch to drop into the infrasonic range.

Zach Poff has Resources for Exploring Ultrasound. For example, Bioacoustics researchers and hobbyists use portable bat detectors to lower their pitch into the human hearing range in realtime.

See What Happens When You Tickle a Rat - Ultrasonic laughter. Male mice make "courtship songs". These researchers used machine learning to recognize their calls.

Brian House has made "macrophones" that capture infrasound (ultra-low frequencies) and speed it up by several octaves.