ajfotofilmagem said:Depends on what you consider as video camera. If you speak the traditional concept Panasonic AG-HMC80 is great and really full on features and settings, although it is heavy. if you speak in DSLR 5D mark III is beyond your price range, 6D has moire problems, so is modest 70D does a good job of $ 1200 for the body only.
wallybarthman said:With a 2500 budget here's what I would do:
- Canon EOS 70D w/ 18-135 STM Lens: $1549
- Lilliput 569 O/P External Monitor: $260
- Ravelli 67-inch Adjustable Fluid Head Tripod: $90
- EzFoto Follow Focus/Rails: $279
- Rokinon 35mm T1.5 Cinema Prime: 499
These are all new prices and total 2677 but there you have a complete set up and one you can expand on. The 70D is an outstanding video DSLR and will make me hard pressed to reach for a traditional video camera again. Buy a shoulder rig or something and you've got a great set up when paired with the 18-135 lens - smooth autofocus, it's great.
The next four items are more traditional for video, but very helpful. The Lilliput 569 is a great external monitor at a great price. It offers peaking which helps you know whether you're in focus or not and runs on a standard LP-E6 battery (same as the higher-end Canons). The Ravelli Fluid head is a nice fluid head tripod at a nice price. The follow focus and rails are an investment for the future, but make shooting video using traditional EF mount lenses a whole lot easier as it adds a gear belt so you can easily adjust focus. Finally, the Rokinon cinema prime lenses are wonderful for video - you can adjust exposure smoothly (no clicking and noise) and they come pre-geared. Plus, they're pretty cheap to expand the collection.
Probably not what you're looking for it's a heck of a setup that is very expandable and versatile.
wallybarthman said:Still the 70D. Unless you (1) really like the full-frame look for video (2) Need exceptional low light performance there is no need to go above a 70D in price. You can look at something like the Canon XF100 but it's a small chip video camera and won't do the ISO, depth of field, or sharpness of the 70D. The 5D Mark III lacks the autofocus functionality of the 70D which is a huge help for video.
I've used just about every Canon DSLR out there at this point (1D X, 5D III, 6D, 7D, 60D, Rebels, etc) because I own a rental company and I can tell you unless you're ready to spring for a Canon Cinema camera (like the C100 at $5500) your best bet is the 70D. Unless you really want a traditional camcorder and the features (easier zoom, built-in lenses, longer recording times, etc) you can't go wrong with the 70D. The downside of a DSLR is to really make it shine for video you need accessories that you don't need with a stand alone camcorder.
sjschall said:This question is impossible to answer. There is no camera that does it all. I would try to think about what you'll be filming and go from there. Docs? Events? Narratives?
KO said:Thank you all for great feedback!
It all comes down to two cameras.
TheBlackMagic Cinema pocket camera or the Canon 70D.
I do know that theblackmagic requires color grading, something i'm set to learn if i buy it. But it's superior image quality is outstanding even compared to the Canon MKIII. And it's "only" 995 dollars. Though battery life got me concerned with the Blackmagic pocket camera. Also how weather-proof is it? I'm gonna shoot outside in cold weathers.
Back to the Canon 70D compared to the blackmagic, it just looks so washed out. But its still more "affordable" with additional lenses in the package. And "good" video quality.
I'm all about video with my camera. As i'm a VFX & 3d artist "i'm in love" with post production.
If you had to choose, which one would you buy and why?
Thank you!
I'm off to work now!
bluegreenturtle said:Sigh. There is no "best" overall - you have to tailor it to the kind of shooting you do. It sounds like right now, you don't know, so buying the best will be of no benefit - most PAID video work has little to do with absolute best IQ. I have a documentary production studio and do well into 6 figures of profit a year in video work - I could "afford" any video camera on the market, including something like an F55 or the like. I choose to work with a 5DIII right now because it fits what I do, not because it's best. I don't want slow setups, I don't want people gawking at me when I am working on the street, I just want to get my work done quickly and the DSLR does that, while providing me control over the image in a way I'm comfortable with.
I look at my work just 3 years ago and now and it's worlds apart and it has nothing to do with the equipment I use - it's about understanding what I want to get and how to get it. You sort of hit a pet peeve of mine (common in some of my clients) that they can "buy" their way into video work by having the right equipment. I've watched documentaries that were shot on $500 handy cams that blow my work, shot with $25,000 worth of gear, out of the water - because they knew *exactly* what story they were trying to tell, how to tell it, and how to use their gear to the absolute best of its ability. Get a camera you can afford (the suggestion of the 70D is a good one) and start shooting. You'll start to figure out what works and what doesn't - then upgrade later. I did more than $150,000 worth of work on a Canon 7D ($1300), secured another $200,000 worth of work based on that previous work, and sold the 7D for $1100. Just get something and learn.