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Oct 20

Watch our Festival Award Winning Short Shot on the Canon HV20


Well friends, we promised to catalog the journey of our adventures with the now venerable beauty that was the Canon HV20, the little HD camcorder that arguably started a revolution.

Now we would like to share with you some of the fruit of our labors as we make available to you the full version of our first official short film “A Killer App” shot exclusively with one HV20 and one Canon HV20 Wide Angle lens.

The film, a parable about the effects of social media on our relationships, (and a zombie short to others), went on to screen at festivals around the world and even win some awards.

You can watch “A Killer App” now at the movie’s official site.

PosterFeb25Whitetext Watch our Festival Award Winning Short Shot on the Canon HV20

share save 256 24 Watch our Festival Award Winning Short Shot on the Canon HV20
Mar 14

A gorgeous video test, shot with the Canon HV20


As described by creator Kadir Köymen:

“We used a HV20 plus 3 Fd lenses (described in the video)

The color is not touched. No color correction is applied. In fact the colors turned pale after the export.

In my opinion the best result is achieved by using the camcorders TV mode (50 shutter). The cine mode caused some problems (shutter problems).”

Adding a lens adapter to a Canon HV20 is sheer bliss. Read my earlier posts about setting the shutter speed and frame rate correctly and you will be shooting beautiful images that rival high-end film cameras.

share save 256 24 A gorgeous video test, shot with the Canon HV20
Feb 9

HV20 Experiment 1: Film Setup, No Gain, No Cell Phone Trick

Posted on Saturday, February 9, 2008 in Canon, cell phone trick, Cinemode, exposure, HV20, iris, Lighting, shutter speed, tvmode

Today I ran an experiment to push the HV20 to give me optimal film settings with the narrowest depth of field without a lens adapter. In other words, I wanted to see what I could get using just the camera itself.


After reading an excellent post by the author (handle: Aramis) of the Canon Elura guide (elurauser.com) over at the hv20 boards I decided to forego Barry Green’s “cell phone trick” (with all respect intact) and thus CineMode, and instead lock the shutter speed at 1/48th using TVMode instead.


Here is the reasoning Aramis provides:


“I find Barry’s article unnecessary complex and convoluted. I believe that there is no reason of pointing to light source. What for? Need to read current aperture? Press the photo button. Need to set aperture? Select Tv mode, choose shutter speed, then lock exposure and adjust to your liking, checking current aperture with photo button. Not enough EV range? Well, in this case you can point to a dark area or, conversely, to a bright light source just to set a different baseline for built-in light meter, then lock exposure. Then you can adjust exposure and the range will be different, but what is the point of shifting the range, say, to smaller apertures if you shoot in low light? You won’t see anything.”


I locked the exposure to give me as open an iris as possible without adding electronic gain – in this case – 2.4 (-8 EXP). Anything above that setting showed a redundant 2.4 on the display and thus I assumed I was moving into digital gain territory (ie. -9 gave me 2.6, -8 gave me 2.4, -7 and above also showed 2.4). I based this on a diagram which displays that the largest aperture at full zoom for HV20 is is f/3.0. (Fig. 1.1)

Taking this into consideration, I decided to attempt an optical zoom that was at neither extreme. Most discussions thus far have concerning locking the exposure and shutter involve the camera being zoom all the way in or all the way out. A little restrictive by any definition.


manual mode aperture table hv20 HV20 Experiment 1: Film Setup, No Gain, No Cell Phone Trick

(Fig. 1.1) Demonstrating aperture/gain relationship of the HV20 where the red area is the electronic gain zone
Copyright © 2007 elurauser.com

By playing with the optical zoom to compress the foreground and background I was able to blur the background more while keeping the foreground in sharp focus and vice versa; using nothing more than the fidgety little focus ring, I got some excellent rack focus going between the distant foreground and background. The results are terrific. I got a very narrow depth of field, 1/48th shutter, a nice wide open iris at 2.4 and no electronic gain (ie.as little noise as possible).


The scene is lit with various “practicals”; (an upright halogen light from K-Mart, 40-watt energy saver bulb in a glass brick from IKEA, and, most importantly, a 500W Lowel V Light bouncing off the ceiling. I also used a gold reflector to balance out the dark side of my face. Without enough light this shot would have been impossible.


The experiment proved that I can control my shutter, exposure and focus, achieving a very narrow depth of field with just a few simple steps and nothing more than the Canon HV20 and in this case the Canon wide angle lens attached (and lots of light!)


Shutter 1/48th (TVMode 48)

Exp: 2.4 (-9 gain, exp lock)
Manual Focus
HD 24p

Pics and vi(m)deo coming soon!



share save 256 24 HV20 Experiment 1: Film Setup, No Gain, No Cell Phone Trick

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