I'd personally advise making sure the lamps are well covered with paper for a start off. But one thing I've found, which certainly isn't mentioned often when accounting for light-flicker is what colour bricks are used in your set. For instance, if your set is consisting of mainly darker coloured bricks the reflection onto those from yourself or other parts of your set can cause flickering. I'd advise using a colourful set at all times, with maybe white, blue, red or green as your main wall colour.
And also, there's another thing as well, which may not be fixable - and that's your camcorder's adaptability to light change. I know when filming on my old camcorder that it was actually too good, thus when any of my mini-figures moved it accounted for this and balanced the lighting accordingly, which when taking an ordinary photograph is fine, but in stop-motion makes for the afore mentioned problem of light flicker. However that's of course simply from my experience.
'look like it was shot at 2 FPS by a blindfolded five year old boy with broken fingers and no thumbs.' -PushOver
I'll be back animating soon! Exams and computer faults are keeping me away </3Drifter (THAC 11) -
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