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| Underwater Video & Photography: Discuss Someone want to teach me video? in the General Diving Forums forums: OK, I could do with the very basics of video explained to me by someone a bit patient. Happy to ... |
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That's the very basics in a nutshell!
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| Ok, My top tips: Lighting - Get lots, then get some more. You cannot have too much light. Give all your models lots of light too. White Balance - Set your white balance regularly Do everything slowly. Swim as slowly as you can, then go slower. This will still be too fast for video. Brief your models. Especially about signals, speed of actions, and positioning. Work out your shots in advance. When editing it all together try to go from a wide angle to a close up. Never 2 of the same angle. Also try and have a mixture of shots with and without models. Feel free to ask me any questions and I will try and answer. HTH John
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| Don't use the zoom, don't take more than 8 secs footage at any one time. Ian
__________________ Oh Durr, it's all going wrong ![]() "Vigilant, the moment a delusion appears, Which endangers myself and others, I shall confront and avert it Without delay" (Translation of part of Tibetan Buddhist chant) |
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| I recommend you find someone who will let you carry their camera, dive kit, lunchbox etc for them, but in exchange they can teach you all they know
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| Film something that is interesting, another piece of scrap metal means nothing. Pick your subject, approach slowly and steadily, do not get distracted by anything else. If you are using ambient light, reset the white balance regularily, if using lights, as many as you can afford/borrow will be best, HID preferably. Editing can do wonders, don't use too many transitions, don't use crap music. Colour correction does work quite well on some software for anything that is a little off, but it can go a bit adrift.
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| Zoom with your fins. Film 10-12 seconds and edit down to no more than 8, unless it's particulalry interesting. Steady the camera when macro filming. An unsteady clip will make the viewer sick!
__________________ Men never grow up, their toys just get more expensive. www.subseaimages.com www.selbyaquanauts.co.uk |
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| G'Day fella I think largely you may be limited to what set up you have. What have you got? If your housing will accomodate white balance then you should get some get good footage, but use manual white balance for best results. If you dive somewhere like the UK you will need some decent lights, but again you might be limited to what you can attach to the housing. Somewhere like the Red sea a filter would be good at depth. Carry extra weight. Try and avoid shooting downwoods, get level or below the subject. this is usefull for picking up the sunlight. If you can lay on the sand then do so. The key is to get good steady slow footage. Think about composition of the footage Have a plan of what sort of footage you want Avoid zoom in and out while recording Also film at different angles Film for at least 10 secs, if you film too much it can be edited, if you film too little you're buggered. Above all just practise and have fun!!! |
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