[ale] Special effects used while creating a slide show
Barlow, Jim D
jim.d.barlow at intel.com
Sun Nov 29 21:35:10 EST 2009
>> On 2009, Nov, 28, , at 9:00 AM, Richard Bronosky wrote:
>>> What you are looking for is "The Ken Burns Effect".
>> Actually, the effect is called "pan and zoom", and it has
>> been around for as long as there have been motion picture
>> cameras.
> Except that it was virtually unused on static photographs before Ken Burns popularized the process.
A notable pre-Burns use of the technique was the opening and closing of the super epic: "The Great Waldo Pepper" in 1975.
It was used to show deceased barnstorming pilots in the 20s and 30s of the last century.
I call the technique, as a result, the "George Roy Hill Effect".
> Pan and Zoom is still usually relegated to video, while "Ken Burns Effect" is almost exclusively meant to simulate the Pan and Zoom on static images.
> The differences are subtle, but important in cinematography.
> Cheers,
> Robert~
Jim
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