High-speed slow-motion capture up to 1000fps. — tailored for digital art professionals.
Discover the StudioLocation scouting, shot list creation, equipment selection, crew coordination, permits, and schedule optimization.
Multi-camera capture with cinema-grade gear, professional lighting, wireless audio, and real-time monitoring.
Organized media backup to dual drives, shot log with timecodes, and secure delivery of all raw footage.
Good to know
Every project includes a dedicated project manager and clear milestones with approval checkpoints.
All final deliverables are yours — full ownership and usage rights included with every project.
In the Digital Art sector, professional video content has become essential for standing out in a competitive market. Whether you need promotional material, training content, or brand storytelling, Slow Motion delivers measurable results that transform how digital art professionals communicate with their audience.
Digital art video production documents creative work that exists primarily in digital form — generative algorithms, interactive installations, VR experiences, AI-assisted compositions, and NFT collections that challenge traditional definitions of art and ownership. Screen capture of the creative process (coding generative art in Processing or TouchDesigner, sculpting in ZBrush, compositing in Nuke) reveals the technical skill behind work that audiences often dismiss as "computer-made." Exhibition documentation of immersive installations (teamLab, Refik Anadol) requires wide-angle lenses, stabilized movement through spaces, and careful color management to represent projected and LED-displayed work accurately. The audience spans tech-savvy collectors, institutional curators exploring digital acquisition, and online communities on platforms like SuperRare, Foundation, and Art Blocks. Artist process documentaries that demystify the code-to-canvas pipeline build credibility and market value. Distribution targets art and technology publications, social media, gallery partner channels, and digital art marketplace profiles. Budgets range from 1,000-3,000 euros for process documentation to 5,000-15,000 euros for exhibition and artist profile films.
Cultural institutions face the challenge of reaching audiences beyond their physical walls. 62% of museum visitors watch online content before visiting, and virtual exhibitions have become essential for global reach. Video must capture the visceral impact of art while respecting the artist's vision and the work's integrity.
From exhibition documentation to artist interviews, performance capture to educational content, cultural video requires sensitivity and technical excellence. Low-light gallery conditions, reflective surfaces, and the need to convey scale and texture all present unique production challenges.
A contemporary art museum produced virtual tour videos of their flagship exhibition. Online viewership reached 2.8M (vs 180K physical visitors), international ticket sales increased 34% for subsequent exhibitions, and the museum's subscriber base grew 156%.
Cultural video amplifies reach exponentially: virtual exhibition videos reach 15x more people than physical visits, artist interview series increase exhibition attendance by 34%, and educational art content builds long-term audience loyalty. Cultural institutions with active video channels report 45% higher membership renewal rates.
1. Pre-Production: Location scouting, shot list creation, equipment planning, talent coordination, permits, and schedule optimization.
2. Setup & Lighting: Professional lighting design (3-point, natural, or cinematic), audio setup with redundant recording, and camera rigging.
3. Filming: Multi-camera capture with cinema-grade equipment, real-time monitoring, and direction to ensure every shot serves the narrative.
4. Wrap & Delivery: Organized media backup, shot log documentation, and secure delivery of all raw footage to post-production.
Slow-motion capture records at high frame rates — 120fps, 240fps, or up to 1000fps with specialized Phantom or Chronos cameras — to reveal details invisible to the naked eye. We use this for product splashes, athletic movements, industrial processes, scientific demonstrations, and cinematic beauty shots. Lighting requirements increase dramatically with frame rate (a 1000fps shot needs 8-16x more light than 24fps), so we plan lighting rigs specifically for slow-motion work. A typical shoot produces 20-40 unique slow-motion clips over a half-day session. We deliver both raw high-speed files and time-interpreted versions at 24fps or 25fps, ready for editing.
You receive: all raw footage on SSD/cloud, shot log with timecodes, audio files (WAV 24-bit), BTS photos, and production report.
Cameras: RED Komodo/V-Raptor, ARRI Alexa Mini, Sony FX6/FX9 | Lenses: Cinema primes, Angenieux zooms | Audio: Sennheiser/Lectrosonics wireless, boom | Grip: Dana Dolly, Ronin 2, Easyrig
Ready to elevate your Digital Art brand with professional slow motion? Our team combines deep industry expertise with advanced production techniques to deliver content that drives real results. Contact us for a free consultation and custom quote — no commitment required.
Let's discuss your slow motion needs for digital art. Free consultation and custom quote — no commitment required.