SoleMates
2nd Level Red Feather
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2013
- Messages
- 1,314
- Points
- 83
Okay, so, I'm in Philadelphia for a few months and decided to sample some of the local flavor, as it were. I put out the call for models, and who should answer but a former FM Concepts/Southern Atmospheres gal by the (stage) name of Barbie.
Anyway, we set up a shoot, I show up, and all is going well until I notice that my video camera is taking still photos every few seconds. I stopped the shoot a couple of times to see if I couldn't figure out what was going on, as I didn't know if it was taking video or what (I'm still a bit of a noob with all the features , don'tchaknow). Eventually I discovered that yes, it was still getting video. I must've flipped every switch that darn thing had trying to get it to stop, and eventually it seemed to, so I carried on.
This morning I decided I should figure out how to do that on purpose, because as a result of that oddity I wound up with like three dozen still photos on my camera. After a huge amount of digging, I realized that what happened was, my camera has a Smile Shutter, which takes photos during video if it sees a subject smiling... and it's set to Dual Capture by default.
So naturally, the Smile Shutter pretty much went nuts during the filming of a tickling segment.
Here's a taste of the kind of pictures I got out of it;

Anyway, we set up a shoot, I show up, and all is going well until I notice that my video camera is taking still photos every few seconds. I stopped the shoot a couple of times to see if I couldn't figure out what was going on, as I didn't know if it was taking video or what (I'm still a bit of a noob with all the features , don'tchaknow). Eventually I discovered that yes, it was still getting video. I must've flipped every switch that darn thing had trying to get it to stop, and eventually it seemed to, so I carried on.
This morning I decided I should figure out how to do that on purpose, because as a result of that oddity I wound up with like three dozen still photos on my camera. After a huge amount of digging, I realized that what happened was, my camera has a Smile Shutter, which takes photos during video if it sees a subject smiling... and it's set to Dual Capture by default.
So naturally, the Smile Shutter pretty much went nuts during the filming of a tickling segment.
Here's a taste of the kind of pictures I got out of it;





