Showing posts with label North Shore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label North Shore. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Backstory — Dave Wassel at massive Pipeline (Via GrindTV)


Dave Wassel at Pipeline on what photographer Scott Aichner calls “the biggest day I ever shot there.” Photo: Aichner
Dave Wassel at Pipeline, North Shore of Oahu
February, 2004
Photo by Scott Aichner

“This is Dave Wassel on the biggest wave at Pipeline I’ve ever shot. It was one of those epic, a-bit-too-big west swells back in February, 2004. I sat on the beach for an hour or so seeing if it was even doable. The first time around, I started the swim out and couldn’t make any headway. Bad timing. I had to turn tail and do the walk of shame with everyone watching [laughs]. The sets were bombing, but there were moments. … ‘Go!’ I said to myself. ‘Put your head down and go!’ This is back in the film days and I only had 36 frames, so I had to choose wisely,” says water photographer Scott Aichner.
Dave Wassel at Pipeline; photo Scott Aichner
Dave Wassel at Pipeline; photo Scott Aichner
“The afternoon glare was pretty bad. I’m not sure who was out; I think Jamie O’Brien, Kelly Slater, and a few more guys, but I was the only photographer out. The current was pretty swift, and I was drifting down the beach toward Gums when this wave came in with Liam MacNamara on it. I just snuck under… ‘The next one!’ I was tempted to just go under, ‘But, wait! I’m in the perfect spot. This thing is going to swing wide and focus on to Gums, and I’ve got six frames left!’ ‘Dave’s really deep, what the…’ Yeah, I was talking to myself out there. I had to really anchor myself so I wouldn’t get sucked over the falls. He was going so fast! It eventually closed out, and all I could think was, ‘Please, Dave, pop up out the back of the wave!’” adds Aichner.
Dave Wassel at Pipeline; photo Scott Aichner
Dave Wassel at Pipeline; photo Scott Aichner
“Dave had broken his back on a two-foot wave in Australia the year before, so I was worried. But there he was. ‘Thank you surf God!’ He said later that he whizzed by the reef really fast and got ejected out the back with his board. I looked down at my camera and saw one frame left. ‘Time for a selfie!’”
Dave Wassel at Pipeline; photo Scott Aichner
Dave Wassel at Pipeline; photo Scott Aichner
Dave Wassel at Pipeline; photo Scott Aichner
Dave Wassel at Pipeline; photo Scott Aichner
Dave Wassel at Pipeline; photo Scott Aichner
Dave Wassel at Pipeline; photo Scott Aichner
Dave Wassel and Scott Aichner celebrate with a selfie; photo Scott Aichner
Dave Wassel and Scott Aichner celebrate with a selfie; photo Scott Aichner
For more of Scott Aichner’s work, go to bestsurfstockphotos

Friday, November 30, 2012

Canon 7D - North Shore in Slow Motion


I just picked up a Canon 7D yesterday and now I'm really hooked. I'm so hooked that I started this blog so that I don't start taking over my surf blog http://nobadtides.blogspot.com/. I did a little searching on Youtube and found this awesome video. I'm looking forward to one day shooting a video like this one- check it out:


North Shore in Slow Motion - Canon 7D 1000 FPS





Uploaded by  on Mar 23, 2011

Add my facebook youtube page! :) http://www.facebook.com/pages/Devin-Super-Tramp/165050690179330
And don't forget Twitter! :) http://www.twitter.com/devinsupertramp

Film was made by Devin Graham.

To contact me about potential freelance jobs/feature film work, contact me by email here.
dpdevin@gmail.com

Stephen Anderson wrote the music score that was used in this video. You can download the song on iTunes in the link below.

http://itunes.apple.com/us/album/countyourblessings/id416849235?i=416849293
The song from this video is called "Count Your Blessings", it's from a old Christian hymn that Stephen did his own rendition of.
You can also contact him here.

http://www.stephenjanderson.com

The main surfer in the video is Andy Pierce. Evan Fa is one of the body boarders in the video as well.

On a technical note:
The entire video was shot on a Canon 7D, all in 720P, at 60fps (frames per second).

I used a couple different Canon lenses to shoot this, they were...
Canon 70-200 F/2.8
Canon 100-400 F/4/5.6
Canon 2X III Extender (this makes the lens when it is at 400mm, become 800 mm's. It does loose some quality, but it's not very noticeable.)

The entire video was shot all on the North Shore, at Pipeline, and Waimea for the big waves.

To get the "super slow motion", after I filmed at 60fps, I through it into the program "After Effects". I used an effect that comes with the program called "Time Warp". This allowed me to make the 60fps, to 1000fps. The way this works is the computer processes/adds frames in between the frames that are already in existence. It took several days for the computer to process the clips into the super slow motion that appears as well, so it does take a lot out of the computer, as far as processing goes.

Another similar program that does something similar to this slow motion effect, is a program called "Twixtor". It's another great program that is very similar, however you have to buy it as a separate plugin, and it is a little expensive, but if you do a lot of slow motion, it's totally worth it :)

For BUSINESS ENQUIRERS ONLY, you can contact me at this email.

devinsupertramp@gmail.com