That was great. It reminded me when Hidden Frontier was ending. The Producers added my SFI ship USS Angelfire NCC-75025 in one of the ending episodes. To actually see "my ship" in Hidden Frontier was very emotional!
There are 2 films which have included a dreadnaught class and I have another 2 films with shots already completed. This was a best of reel of the year :D Thanks for the kind words! any of the shots you liked in particular?
Nice show of ships from past episodes to you all an Sam you have a great talent to make these ships seem real an to write great episodes for all the great actors on your bridge of stories to tell
That's very kind of you to say, thank you!! Lots and lots more to tell! Any shots you particularly liked? These were some of my favourite from this year :D (well...of the released ones!)
This was amazing... thankyou eversomuch... really appreciated this. (PS... I have a bit of a backlog of your wonderful uploads to be going through at the moment so forgive my ignorance about the ship NCC 2115 you show at 2:33 regarding it's name... is it really the USS Dominon?) Live long and prosper and here's to a fantastic 2024... you guys are the best and are 'paramount' to keeping the dream alive, thanks again🖖
Thanks Ozzie! Sorry your shuttle shot didn't make the reel ha! Any shots you particularly liked? These were some of my favourite from this year :D (well...of the released ones!)
Its a Trek universe ship since it appeared in a cross over fan film released in May :D ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-OTcft3bj_M0.html&t=
Hi Daimo. All cinema/TV is created at a 24fps. This was how old cameras worked in the oldern days and our eyes have been trained to see a "cinematic"/filmic look. When the hobbit was released the director tried to do a 48fps version and millions of people found it to look too much like "TV" and too crisp, the director subsequently did not continue this 48fps version of his project for later films as the audience didn't want it. 60FPS is a very "hyper real" look and in the few shots i have done before, feels weird and off putting to the natural flow of a ships movement. That's all just the creative side. Practically. If it takes 1min to render 1 frames...and i render at 24fps then that's 24mins to get the 1 second and 144mins (2.4hrs) to render. If i did the same shot in 60fps at the 1min per frame. It would take 60 mins per 1 second of footage and so 360mins for the full 6 second clip. (6hours). So, I am not keen to spent over 2x the time to to render a version of the clip that most people wont like the look of as much and massively reduce my ability to create shots at the pace i need. I also don't shoot my live action work at 60FPS, so the clips would not edit together and flow properly at the 24/60 slplit, unless i filmed at 60FPS as'well then all the same render time problems and style problems would happen for my live action. So i choose to stick to the cinematic 24fps for creative reasons, artist reasons and practical reasons :D Thanks for commenting!