Jeff Adams
north carolina
neofilmproductions.com
My name is Jeff Adams. I own Neofilm Productions, which is a side project I've been developing since 2004. I love being a part of making movies, shooting virtually everything, editing, and creating websites!

Neofilm Production’s mission is to offer you quality multimedia and promotional services with outstanding customer service.

Neofilm Productions is based in Shelby, North Carolina near South Carolina. We enjoy working close with our clients and are passionate about meeting your Multimedia needs. Neofilm Productions works to capture memories and to propell your image into the minds of your market.

Professional video deposition services!

Recent activity

  • like
    2 months ago
    Jeff Adams likes An Evening of Fishing
  • Video comment
    2 months ago
    Jeff Adams commented on An Evening of Fishing

    Man, this is nice:) i'm excited to get this camera!!!

  • Video comment
    2 months ago
    Jeff Adams commented on Time Lapse of a Sunset

    Awesome!

  • like
    2 months ago
    Jeff Adams likes Out on the Town w/HMC150
  • Video comment
    2 months ago
    Jeff Adams commented on HMC150 Test Clips

    Beautiful work, i wonder what settings you're using too...

    I’m in the market for a new camera and strongly considering the HMC150. It would seem most telling if I could find somewhere in cyberspace where someone has appropriately viewed the end result of an HMC150 on an HDTV, preferably the extreme scenario, like shot 1080P and rendered to blu-ray and viewed on a 50" HDTV, do you know how this may turn out? any blocks, artifacts, noise? Like in dark areas, skies, or anyone on a big screen?

    I mostly shoot events, weddings, etc... and need something for low light situations like receptions and parties. I've been using 3 Sony HDR SR1's for almost 4 years now, but only in SD. It would be great to have something for the lowly lit situations like receptions, parties, dance floors, etc... that i can depend on without have to increase gain and loose image color, depth, quality... and then eventually have it with little to no noise on a big HDTV. Could this happen with this camera?

    And, do you convert the AVCHD before you edit it to make it easier to edit? If so, do you notice any degradation?

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