Waay to much trouble to use film for this one. You'd have to scan all  
the images, and that might lead to some disparity. I would definitely  
use digital. With one lens of course. A fixed focal point and  
established parameters for color temp and exposure. I'd pick a  
landmark that wouldn't move to mark the edge of frame. I'd shoot of a  
tripod and mark the tripod mount location. Don't make it difficult.  
For a moving picture you definitely don't need any higher res than  
what a 6 megapixel camera can deliver.
Paul
On Nov 21, 2007, at 4:27 PM, Jens Bladt wrote:

> Hello List
> I may be offered a chance to make one (two, actually) shots every  
> week or
> so, for a period of perhaps 6-8 years. Thats perhaps 52x8 (416)  
> shots For
> the harbour project in my home town. Perhaps you remember that I'm  
> a city
> planner/architect working for the local community.
> We're buildnig a new 40 ha harbour on topof a 4.000.000 ton soil  
> deposit.
> I'll arrange for two stationary tripods (steel and concrete) to be  
> installed
> at different places. So the camera position is not really an issue.  
> The
> result will be a small movie (30 seconds?), showing in seconds how  
> the whole
> thing was built during a 6-8 year period. My question is: What kind of
> camera equipment would you use, in order to make sure all shots ar
> compatible - same angle of view, same colour rendition etc.
> I was thinking of 6x6 equipment (Pentacon or Hasselblad) and 120-film
> (bought in advance and stored in a freezer).
> What do you guys think ?
>
> Regards
> Jens Bladt
>
> http://www.jensbladt.dk
> +45 56 63 77 11
> +45 23 43 85 77
>
>
>
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