When it's on, not so much. Due to the nature of the arcane magic powering these things - what I imagine is a mixture of alien death rays, cosmic background radiation and black hole essence - trying to take a perfect pix of a live CRT screen can be fairly tricky. I was wondering if the resident experts might have any advice.
I found two fairly decent articles on the subject:
-http://www.halfhill.com/video.html
-http://strobist.blogspot.co.uk/2006/04/ ... s-and.html
So basically the golden rule is "shoot under 1/30". Darken the room as much as possible, avoid reflections. Pray to the Phosphor God.
I tried this (bar the last bit). The results vary, seeing as I don' have a tripod - at this exposure speeds it can be tricky to maintain perfect balance while in handheld mode. Also, I suppose the inherent flickery nature of the medium might play a part. Bu that's a lesser problem, I suppose that with a tripod (or at least a makeshift one) the sharpness can be more less brought under control.
More worrying for me was the fact that white balance is extremely difficult to reproduce properly. Basically, the colours you get in the photo seldom match the ones on screen. Not sure how to deal with this (tried lots of different mods, custom one sometimes help). You can of course try and compensate in some post processing program, but that's more of a hassle, especially seeing as you then need to fire up the game and find the particular scene to compare.
I'm using Sony RX100. Mostly tried with shutter at 1/15, f stops depending on the scene (mostly 2-5) and ISO 200. The TV is KV-29F2U Trinitron (contrast: near max, brightness: about 1/3rd) fed RGB signal from RPi3 B.
Some examples (click for the big ones)







Any suggestions on how to improve the results most appreciated. I'm mostly concerned with sharpness & colour reproduction, geometry/framing is more of a "mechanical", easy issue (similarly, these haven't been retouched with usual post process tools).