Transcripts
1. Welcome to This Cinematography Class!: Hello Bonjour Ola and
welcome to this course. My name is Julian
Melinson and I'm going to be the instructor for this cinematic cinematography
logging filming course. And we're going to be
talking about how to make your videos look and sound
amazing with these simple, straightforward
techniques that we're going to be covering
in this course. So let's get right into it. First up, the transformation that you're going to have
by taking this course. If I do my job, you'll be able to create
incredible looking and sounding videos with any
camera in any situation. This level of content, these techniques
that I'm talking about in this course
are going to be for beginner to intermediate
level students. If you're someone who's
shot some things in the past and you're
looking for really simple, clear techniques on how
to upgrade your style. This is for you if you
are a new beginner, novice, that has a phone, has a smart device, or has a DSLR or a
wireless camera, and you want to start shooting videos and you don't
know where to start. This is the perfect
course for you as well. So let's get into
a micro overview of the main steps that we're
going to go through in this course to achieve the transformation
and the new skill set that you're looking for. First up, we're going to dive
into the camera settings. Okay, I'm really
just going to cover the most essential
manual settings for you to use on
your smartphone or on your camera that
will allow you to get the best looking video quality for the situation
you're shooting in. Next, I'm going to be going into the most important
techniques that you need to know to start shooting
better looking videos. Next I'm going to be talking
about audio and B role. So this is really important because a lot of videos
I see from students don't have these two essential
fundamental techniques really of how to capture
the best sounding audio. And how to really upgrade your video style with having
proper cutaway shots. So this we're going
to also dive into. And finally, synthesizing all of these techniques to bring them together into one cohesive, final product that you will be able to share
on your Instagram, on your Youtube
channel, on Facebook, on whatever social media or online presence
that you have, you'll be able to bring
these techniques together. And so we just have a few housekeeping items to get to before really diving
into the course content. First up, this is a one course
of a multi course series. I did it on purpose this way, where each course is giving you a different type of information depending on
what you're looking for. There's other courses
on the editing process, there's other courses on the pre production and
creativity process. So those are linked
on my Instagram. Those are linked in the bonus final lecture of this course. You don't got to
worry about it now. I'm just giving you a heads up. Get through this course first. But it's designed for all of these to build on
top of each other.
2. Learning Exercise: Lighting and Shooting 101: So now that we've gotten kind
of the course introduction and the housekeeping
out of the way, I really wanted to start right away with doing a hands
on learning exercise. So in this lecture, you're going to really be
working side by side with me to discover the lighting in the environment
that you're in. I'm going to pull out my
phone and I'm going to do video of myself and you guys are going to
follow along with that. And I really found that
this is the best way, regardless of skill level, if you're a smartphone
shooter, great. If you've been shooting
for a while and you're comfortable with
lighting, great as well. This is really the best
way with the phone. It's going to give you
an instant response instantaneously without having
to look back at footage. At how angling yourself, how different light sources
and all these things change the look and
aesthetic of your image. So go ahead and get your
phone ready and you're going to film yourself along
with me on selfie mode. And you're going to
shoot a before shot with the normal ambient lighting of yourself in your environment. And then you're going
to shoot an aftershot with the new understandings and techniques that I'm going to walk you through in
this learning lesson. Then you can export and
share your before and afters with your fellow students
to the Q and A section. If you don't feel like
sharing these videos of your face in different
lighting, it's totally fine. Instead of that,
you can say hi to your fellow students
and share what you're excited about learning or creating while going
through this course. And so now let's hop into it. So what I'm going to do is
flip over on my phone and I'm going to put the
camera on myself. And we can see that
while I'm talking, this is not a very
good looking image. And the reason of that is because the background
is blown out. The lighting on me is not very well balanced
for this situation. The background is all white, there's no real contrast. It's a little bit better
if I just simply, all I did was probably move
my arm 12 " to my left. And now we have much better
light coming directly from this light source and we have a much better background
than the white. So there's just
these little tips and tricks that
we are doing with the more professional style and more professional equipment. But these things also apply
to all the little Instagram, Tiktok, Facebook videos
that you're doing. All this stuff you
can use to upgrade that content that
you're doing daily. So let's kind of walk
around our space here. And we can already see that huge change of the
quality of lighting. As I'm walking closer
to this window, we can see a huge transition from standing in the middle of the room to now walking
over to this light source. So as we can see, if I really want to
do Iki lighting, where my whole face is lit, I'll face directly
at the window. If I want more
contrasted lighting, because I'm facing two
windows here, actually. So it's a little
bit more tricky. But if I want to make
more contrasted lighting, I'm going to close this window
to this side of my face. And now we can get more
contrast lighting, but this is purely natural
light just on my cell phone. So we can also see that
the background is lower, is exposed a lot lower. So that's making
me stand out more. But let's continue to kind
of go around the house and choose and find what
works and what doesn't work. You can see the
dramatic change in what I look like when I just turn. I'm in the same exact
place that I just was. But if I just turn 180 degrees, this is what this looks like
compared to this. Okay. So now we're going to take a
look where else is working. So here the light is. Okay. But I would say that the overall lighting is
here, is pretty decent, but it's not giving a good pop, a good kind of glossiness. So let's walk over to
this other window. You can see as I approach
and get to this window, you can see my eye color, you can see the
highlights on my face. And you can see that if
I'm facing directly at the window versus as I turn, we're getting more
shadows, right? So if this is what
you're wanting, more of a serious look, more of a contrasted
cinematic look. You want more shadows. If you want more of the tube, the whole face is lit. You want to face
directly at the window. So now we've got
a handle on that. The other thing I wanted to
mention was the distance from the camera to the subject
and the angle of view. If I put the camera here and I'm looking down to you
as the subject, I'm looking down to
you as the viewer. Hey, you're going to
get some chin action. Some people, this
works for some people, doesn't you have to be
the decider of that. But it's a little bit of a weird dominance thing where
I'm speaking down to you. As soon as you
come to eye level, you see there's more of a
world on the same page. And this is what a lot
of people do as well, the kind of looking down. As long as you don't
do it too much, that can be a little bit
weird angle for most people. But you can do it a little
bit above eye level. It makes the features
on the face look a little bit more favorable
depending on your face type. But I do want to mention that, especially in the
selfie video mode, this is a very wide angle lens on the front of
most smartphones. Now the closer I get here, the more it's going
to accentuate. What's closer to the lens
is going to look bigger. And what's further from the
lens is going to look a lot smaller depending on your
face type you want to find. Now, the proportions
on my face and my body are very equal as
soon as I start doing this. Now you can see my
forehead looks really big, in proportion to the
rest of my face. If I do this, my chin
is looking really big. You want to just keep
it in mind that when you're shooting with
a wide angle lens, whether it's a smart
phone or smart phone, or whether it's a lens on your
DSLR or mirrorless camera, you want to know that
it's going to be less flattering the closer
it is to your face. And it's going to
be more flattering when there's a pretty
decent amount of distance. I'm holding this about 2.5
feet away from the face. The angle and the distance makes a very large difference in your overall look
and appearance. So we're looking at lighting, we're looking at background, we're looking at distance,
and we're looking at angle to the face. That should give you guys plenty of stuff to work
with when shooting. From here on out, your videos
should look a lot better, a lot more clean, and a
lot more highly produced.
3. On Set: Set Up and Choosing How to Shoot: All right, and so it's time to hop right into the deep end. You're going to be not
seeing my face too much in this section
because I wanted to maximize your time with
this onset experience. So don't worry, we're
going to have plenty of face time later
in the course. So what we're going to do is
actually open up this door. But this is really a real life
onset experience for you. So this is going to be a
crash course and you know a preview of what
we're going to be learning throughout this course. So if you're hearing things in these next few learning
lessons that you don't know yet or you
don't understand or it's terminology you've
never heard, don't worry. The biggest thing
here is me showing you why you would do certain
things when making a video. Then we're going to get into the how throughout the course. So this behind the scenes set of learning lessons is
just going to help you get the gears turning
and kind of open your mind to different video
creating possibilities. And so now we're going
to time travel to me and Louise right
before our shoot. So what is up guys? And
I saw that up guys. We're here today and for
this portion of the corpse, my friend Luis is
going to be taking us through some
cinematography principles. So we're all on set today
in downtown Los Angeles, and we're going to be taking
a look at lens choice, camera movement, and some other
cinematography principles that we haven't learned
yet in the course. So Luis is a good
friend of mine. We've shot together for
years and we're going to have a fun shoot today
and it's going to be, we're going to try all different types
of cameras, you know, So I'm glad you're here so I can show you
what we're all about. You know, it's gonna be fun
bottom and there it is. So I'll put a montage
of Louis's Instagram, his website, and his
content so you guys can get an idea of the kind of
content that he creates. So with that said,
I will see you guys in the next learning
lesson. Perfect. Now let's dive into this. So the first thing I
want to talk about is knowing your camera
capabilities. Whether you're
shooting on a phone or a La, or a mirrorless camera. You want to know
the dynamic range, You want to know the frames per second that your
camera will shoot. You want to know the body
stabilization that it has. These are all going
to really dictate what you're going to do and
how you're going to do it. Because Louis is really
familiar with his camera. He knows he can get
away with doing a lot of handheld
shots during the shoot because of the embodied image stabilization
that his camera has. He also has a really
good idea of the type of lighting that's going to
work the best for his camera. And what's slowing down? His 60 frames per
second footage in post production is going to look like for the final product. So I really want you to hold
on to that and keep in mind that the more comfortable you
become with your equipment, the easier it's going to be to translate your idea through your camera into creating the final product that
expresses your original idea. So let's say that you have
your location picked out. In this case, our main light
source is 5,500 Kelvin, which is going to be a nice natural looking light
because sunlight is 4500-6500 And let's say you've planned and blocked out your camera shots and
your character movement, and you've chosen your lens, You have everything ready to go, and you're ready
to start shooting. Now what do you do? So we're going to really start
with the basics here. The most basic of
shots that you have to choose from is simply
a tripod shot. And you can see in the situation that we are deciding to shoot, this onset is when there's not a whole lot of
action going on and we want the viewer to
focus on our character. Now in the next shot, when we chose to switch to a gimbal, you can see same
character, same outfit, same background, completely
different feeling because we're moving our subject and we're moving
with our subject. So you can see the
comparison here. Tripod shot is very static. Gimboshot has a lot more energy. And then we go to
a handheld shot. This is going to have a less polished and less
refined feeling. And Louise is deciding to use it for this shot because
it really kind of frees you up from the
restrictions that a tripod may have and the flexibility that
a gimble won't have. When you're shooting
something handheld, you really have a lot of options of where you can
point the camera, the height that you place
your camera up and down, and the amount that you can
move from side to side. Now it's a trade off, because a handheld
shot is going to offer a lot less stability than
a tripod or a gimbal, but you're going to give up
that stability for a lot of flexibility and options
during your shoot. So right off the
bat, that gives you some insight for when
you're ready to shoot and you have no idea how you
want to utilize your camera. Asking yourself this question
is a great way to start. Will my scene or video benefit the most
from a tripod shot, a gimble shot, or a handheld shot in
your current scenario?
4. On Set: Camera Movement and Essential Cinematography: So now let's move to
the next fundamental. Now when we're
shooting, let's talk about why we would decide to do camera movement versus
zooming with the camera. If we zoom with the lens on
our camera or our phone, we are magnifying what is at the center of the image
and enlarging it. If we move our camera, we are physically bringing the camera closer to
what's in front of it. Now the plus of this is
that it creates a shift in the background and creates a much more dynamic
looking image. Because there's a conversation
happening with the camera, the subject, and the background. And that conversation
you can only get from physically
moving the camera. You can't get that
from digitally or manually zooming
in on your shot. So we can see a side by side
comparison here of what a wide and static shot looks like versus a close
up with movement. So simply put, the camera and the lens is what shows your
viewers what to look at. But the techniques that
you're going to learn, just like camera movement, are what tells the viewer how to feel about what
they're looking at. So let's dive into some more of Louis's decisions on how
to use those techniques. If we get back to our
main light source that we're using for
this very first set up, the coloring of this light is the same temperature
as daylight. This gives our image a very natural and realistic feeling. Now, if we were to change our temperature to a
much colder light, you can see we haven't changed any of our other techniques. But just by simply changing
the color temperature, we've changed the entire
feeling of our image. Now something else that changes the feeling of your image
is the lens choice. Now here Luis is deciding to use a sigma 18 to 35 millimeter, 1.8 And if you don't understand these terms
yet, don't worry. I promise we're going to dive deeply into this information. So Louise is deciding
to shoot a wide shot. Here we have a large
depth of field, meaning a lot of our image
is going to be in focus. The foreground in the
background is going to remain relatively at the
same level of sharpness. This is great for wide shots. This is great for
when you want you or your subject to be in focus and you want the background
to be in focus. For the next shot, Louis
decided to switch over to the 7,200 millimeter, 2.8 This is a much
more telephoto lens compared to a wide angle. So he's going for a much
more shallow depth of field and getting zoomed way in so we can pick
up on details of our subject rather than
information in the background. So we're deciding to show
detail of our character, her clothes and the
expression that she has versus her in the
surroundings that she's in. You can make that same
decision by deciding what is an important part of the story that
you're telling. Using different lens choices, an excellent way to
better tell that story. And here we're moving
to our next set up. Louise has a little
bit more of a softer, more diffused lighting
source for this location, and we're adding a little bit of fog to create more atmosphere. This is perfect to
add another layer of texture and depth to what's
in front of the camera. And now Louise is deciding
to do a pushing shot, which is making you focus
in on the character. As we're moving
the camera closer. It's really the same exact
thing as a microphone. If I move away from
the microphone, it's a completely
different feeling compared to me moving
closer to the microphone. Visuals work in the
same exact way, and we're using this
situation to really maximize the amount of
shots that we can get. Now that we moved up
close to the character, now Louis is deciding
to continue to record, but to move away from the character to gather
even more coverage. You can really feel the
difference here of moving into our scene versus leaving or doing a pull out and
moving out of a scene. The trick here is really to, as you move forward
as a video creator, think of your shots as having a beginning, middle, and an end. If you're doing a
push into something that's moving into something, starting something,
beginning a shot. If you have maybe a tripod shot or you're doing a tracking shot, that could feel
like a middle shot. If you decided to
do a pull out shot, that could really
be your ending or concluding shot of
your scene or video. That is our first two
set ups for this shot.
5. On Set: Lens Choice and Framing: Now let's talk lenses. Focal length and lens choice is really something that we dive into into this course to really
make your talking video. Interview videos
and any other kind of videos really look a
lot more professional. So one of the first questions you might have when shooting is whether you should use
a zoom lens or prime lens. That's a great question
because there are a few key benefits and
drawbacks to each type of lens. If we start off here with
the prime 50 millimeter, 1.4 we can see is a very
shallow depth of field. Our subject is razor sharp and the background
is very blurry. The downside to this is that
there's no zoom function. You can't move from
50 mill to 70 mill. You have to actually
physically move your body and your camera closer and further
to what you're shooting. Now the tradeoff is
that you're giving away that ability to get multiple
shot types with one lens. For the great looking, shallow depth of field, which looks really cinematic and creates kind of
a one pointed focus. Whatever is in focus on camera the viewer's eye fixates on. And whatever is
out of focus with the prime lens kind of falls
off into the background. And this really just
allows for you to also get a much larger maximum aperture, which lets more light into the
lens and allows for you to shoot in different scenarios with much lower available light. Now when Louis switches
over to his zoom lens, now we're shooting
on at 2041 oh five, at 4.0 So without
having to move, we can get a wide shot. We can get a close
up, we can get a medium shot all very
quickly and easily. So we're getting multiple
focal lengths and multiple different framings
with one single lens. With this 24 mill at 4.0 and this 50 mill at 1.4 you can see a huge difference
with the 50 mill. And we see the
subject very sharp. We see a very cinematic
looking image of our subject on the 24 Mill. It feels much more of a behind
the scenes, less produced, less professional shot because so much of the
frame is in focus. But as I'm shooting the
behind the scenes here, I can very quickly
shoot a wide shot, zoom in and shoot a close
up of just the camera. And easily choose different
types of framing. Now at this next set up, Louis is deciding to throw
on the 17, 40 millimeter, 4.0 It's a super wide angle lens that he's strategically
chose for this very dramatic
setting where we have the subject walking through
this large doorway. And we really get a
feel for the scale and size of what's in our
image compared to the 24, 70 that I'm shooting in on. It's not nearly as dramatic
and we're seeing a lot more of the majority
of the image in focus, so we're clearly
seeing the subject and where she is
in the location. So the takeaway here is
that as a video creator, you're using your tools to change the way that
the viewer is feeling. And you don't need a
whole lot of lenses. If you have maybe two
lenses even on smartphones, and they now have a
wide angle function and a telephoto function. You can mix and use all of these different
techniques together to create something that
feels more professional, or adventurous, or
action oriented. So now I want to
touch on framing. If you've noticed, for pretty
much all of these shots, we're framing the subject's eyes on the upper third
of the screen. This technique is known
as the rule of thirds. There's these imaginary
intersecting lines that intersect at four different
points on your screen. Now if you place important parts of your image on those
intersecting lines, it's a pretty good chance
that you're going to get a good looking, aesthetically
pleasing image. This is a great guideline and a framework to follow
as a video creator. But as we're going to
learn in this course, we want to learn these rules so that we can use
them properly, but then also be
able to consciously break them for a desired effect.
6. On Set: Make Better Edits with Video Coverage: We've been on set for this
high fashion magazine shoot, learning different techniques and really getting a glimpse at what we're going to be
diving into in this course. Now I want to talk about one of the most important parts
of creating a video, which is getting coverage. These techniques that
we've touched on help you to get shots
looking a certain way, but really getting
multiple angles. Shooting the same action in multiple different ways and getting as many usable shots as possible is key to having enough ingredients to work with when you get to the
post production phase. So let's take a look
at what the shots Louise has shot so far would
look like in a montage. Po, po, po. Cool. So all of these shots, what makes them unique
is they're using the fundamentals
from this course for what we were
shooting specifically. It's a short, entertaining and exciting fashion
magazine video. So if everything was on a
tripod with no movement, it would be a pretty
boring video. But what Louise decided to do
was to use the clothing and the character as the
main focal point with dynamic lighting and
an interesting background, and create excitement and action through the
camera movement. Some of the shots here
are very traditional, framed on the thirds and some of the other shots are
very non traditional. That creates unique
imagery that stands out. So the goal here,
like I mentioned, is really to enhance what's
in front of the camera. If you're shooting
a talking shot on an iphone with a tripod, and it's just you standing
in front of the camera, what kind of lighting
and background can you use to make that
more uniquely yours? If you're shooting a
high end fashion video, what kind of camera movement
and framing can you use to make your average
looking shots really stand out? Even like choosing your
background properly, it can be just as important as the subject or the main
focus of your image because it's also
changing the way that we perceive what's on camera. Two different
shots, same subject and outfit, same movement, different backgrounds,
different experience when we're using these things. We're making sure to shoot multiple takes and
multiple angles. This is going to help you carve your story later on in
the editing process. The more coverage you have, the more of a story
you can tell. Things that are important
for this kind of example that Louise is doing is creating a lead in
shot with movement. You see, we're not really
framing anything on the third. There's no special rules
that we're following here, but we're moving the subject into frame and
this gives us kind of a cool intro into a shot which really
makes it stand out. It's also giving us more
to work with in our edit. Little things like
this really add more options for us
later on and allow those extra little
moments that you have recorded to create a
more dynamic video. And now we're tracking
with our subject. We're moving with
our subject and this is something I'm really
excited to get into, which is effectively
using camera movement. That wraps it up for our mini onset crash
course experience. Again, I wanted this to be a really cool way to
get the ball rolling, give you a real life look
at some key techniques that you're going to walk away with as you progress
through this course.
7. Get the Most Out of Your Video Settings Overview: The first thing up is
maximizing your video settings. Before we get into moving the camera, setting up lighting, how to get audio,
we're going to get into how to properly
use your settings. This is for people who
aren't very familiar with the basic functions
of the controls that you can use for the manual
settings on your camera. If you are someone who's very comfortable with
shooting and you want to get directly
into the techniques, you can skip this part
of the chapter and get directly into those
techniques if you want to refresher
or you want to get a little bit more clarity on how to use the manual
settings on your camera, this is a perfect place
for you to start. So let's get into it. If you want to do these
settings along with me, I'm going to run
through these settings on my phone and my camera. So you'll be able to pull out
your camera if you'd like. But before I run through
those settings individually, I'm going to go over an overview of what we're going to
talk about more in detail. First, your phone
or your camera uses these main attributes and variables basically to
create an overall image. The first term that
we're going to talk about is exposure, which is the overall
brightness of your image. And the exposure
is controlled by a few fundamental
characteristics and controls on your camera. The first is the ISO. This boosts the
overall sensitivity on the sensor to the light
coming into the camera. So I'm sure you're relatively
familiar with that. The higher the ISO, the brighter the image. But you're boosting the
signal on the sensor, which can create distortion. You'll see it as
the grainy noise. It's not necessarily grain, it's called camera noise. Grain is something
slightly different. That's with film cameras. Noise There are all
those little dots and things that don't give
it that really clean, kind of polished look. It's more of an older style, a bunch of dots look that's from the ISO and we're going
to dive more into that. Next up is your shutter speed. This is the amount of time that each frame is exposed to light. Okay? The lower
the shutter speed, the longer each frame
is exposed to light. We're going to get
more into that. Next up is the latitude, okay? This is something not a
lot of people talk about. Latitude is the amount
of darkness and brightness that a
censor can expose for. So there's darkness in
this image right here. This black bookcase is probably the darkest
part of the image. And probably the brightest
part of the image is one of these lights in the background or this light, right? That light, the latitude
is the camera's ability to expose for the darkest part of the frame without it
being completely black, and the brightest part
of the frame without it being completely
bright or white. Okay, It's its ability to
hold the low and the high, but expose and have
information there. What happens with
a lot of cameras? The cheaper the camera,
the less the latitude, the more the dark part of the frame is just dark and
the bright is just bright. But I'm getting too
into detail right now, we're going to get
into it later. The next up is the
picture profile. This is basically the
camera color grading that your camera is allowed or able to put on
top of your footage. Okay, that's kind of
the brief overview. It's kind of like an in color correcting color
grading process. It can be more blue and sharp, it can be less
contrasty and warm. This is something
we'll get into. Next up is the white balance. This is the overall
value that your camera assigns to the color
white or yeah, the value of white. The warmer the white balance, the warmer the image, the cooler the white balance,
the colder the image. And we'll get into
the terminology. Next up is the aperture. This is the amount of
light let in through the opening of the
lens right right now, this camera is
shooting at a 2.8, which is a relatively
open aperture. That means the opening
of the lens is larger. If I was shooting at
something like in F 16, this room would be very dark. You wouldn't be able to see
me. And we'll explain why. Next up is the focal length. This is the millimeter number that is on the name of the lens. So the lens that I'm shooting
on right now is a 16, 35 millimeter and it's set
at about 22 millimeters, so that's a relatively
wide angle of view. The lower the millimeter, the wider the angle, The higher the millimeter, let's say a 200 millimeter, the more telephoto and the more, that's more of a telescope. You can see further and we'll explain why and
when to use those. Finally, we have frame rate. This is the amount
of frames that your camera is
recording per second. Right now, we're
shooting at 24 frames a second because that has
a specific aesthetic. There's also 30 frames, 60 frames, 120
frames, 240 frames. We'll get in all those things, but I just wanted to briefly overview what these things were, and then we're going
to dive into it.
8. Tips for Smartphone Shooters: And so for smartphone shooters, it's good to know
that the phone, you know, default setting
is going to be on auto, which means it's going to be choosing all these
parameters for you. In some scenarios that's okay, you'll be totally fine. In a lot of scenarios, you'll want to be using an app
of some kind that will let you adjust these parameters as if it was a DSLR
or mirrorless camera. My favorite app to
use, I have an iphone. It's called Pro Movie.
It's completely free. This app is amazing. It allows for you to shoot
at higher resolutions, higher bit rates, which is
just basically the amount of information that the
camera is recording. The higher the bit rate, the
better the quality overall. So I highly recommend shooting
something with Pro Movie. I don't know about Androids
and the other kind of apps, but I'm sure that you guys are familiar with some of them. You can just go onto the app
store and choose or search a pro recording app
for your phone. Okay. If you have any favorites
and you want to share it in the Q and A section
with some of your students, that would be much appreciated. Go ahead and hop into
the Q and A section, and if you already have
a video recording app that you use for your
phone, please share it. And finally, I'm going to be
demonstrating the settings, doing a screen
capture on my phone, which is linked to my camera. So it's going to be the
same type of settings that you're going to have on
your camera or phone. It's just probably going to
look a little bit different. But regardless, if it's a
DSLR, mirrorless, or phone, you'll have to look for
the settings and wherever matches for the device
that you're using. But that is it for our overview. In the next lecture,
we're going to drop into ISO shutter speed and exposure. So, I'll see you guys
in the next lecture.
9. Nail Your Exposure and ISO Levels: All right. You guys
excited? You ready? Ready to go? Ready
to do this? Okay. I was a fly. Sorry about that.
Okay. So first off, let's start with
the question, okay? Which of these images
do you prefer? Image number one or
image number two? Now, I can't hear you, but I would assume that you would choose
image number one. Do you know why that is? Uh huh. Uh huh. Yes, exactly. Because the exposure
right the viewer's eye. And with that, I will
try not to get too theoretical here because this
is not that type of course, I have other courses on that, but I do really get
excited about this part. The viewer's eye is always
going to be drawn to the most well exposed
part of the frame, right? You're looking at me right now, because the exposure
on my face is at a level that is pleasing or proper to what
the eye wants to look at. If you try looking
directly at the sun, it's like it hurts. And your eyes want to look away. If you're somewhere and it's really dark and it's
nighttime and you're looking, you can't see, it's really
uncomfortable because your eyes can't
perceive what is there. So one of the very
first techniques or understandings for creating our amazing looking and feeling videos is really understanding the importance of exposure. And how that's
changing the way that our audience is really
feeling about our imagery. And so the main way that we
really dive into exposure, which is exposure exposure, AKA the overall brightness
value of our image, is through ISO, shutter
speed and aperture. Now, we always want to start with having a well
exposed frame, because this creates
a pleasing image before we get into framing and before we get
into composition, and before we get into choosing our location and what we want to look like
at all these things, we have to really nail our
exposure first, right? Like I mentioned, the
viewer's eye is going to gravitate towards that well
exposed part of the frame. If the opposite occurs and you're image is not
properly exposed, let's say that I'm too bright in this image and that the background is
well exposed, right? You know, actually let's see. So now we have a completely different
looking image, right? All I did was change the
level of exposure in the background and now it's throwing off the entire
balance of the image. So really keeping this in
mind that we want to nail the exposure in our camera using these values that
we're going to talk about. But also keeping in mind and
what not most people talk about is really
getting and choosing our environment that's going to have a proper exposure, right? Because it's going to make a really big
difference for image. So let's turn off the
slide so we can get back. Oh, so the first thing that
we're talking about with boosting or changing our
exposure is our ISO, and that's changing
the sensitivity of our light to our camera. And this is really good
for low light situations. But like I mentioned, it creates that digital
noise in the image. And it's kind of like
boosting your sound. You know, you've seen
your sound levels in your car and your
editing software. Once it starts
getting to that red, it starts to get a
distorted sound. That's the same kind
of boosting that our camera or our phone
does to get more light, not from the surroundings, but to boost the light
that's hitting the sensor. This kind of can
create a distortion. So it's not something
we want to lead with, but it can be used to make up for not enough
light in our scene. So what I'm going to do, so
what I'm going to do, wow, is I'm going to take my phone, which is attached to you guys, and I'm going to start
a screen recording. Okay. So what I'm going to do
is create a scenario where I don't really have
enough light for my camera, so I'm going to kind of
work backwards here. And since I already
have my camera set up, I'm going to change
my settings and then build from scratch
with you guys. Even though my image is
well exposed for right now, what I'm going to do is change the settings so it's
not well exposed. So I'm going to make
my aperture higher, which is going to
darken my image. And now we're going to
focus on this ISO function. So as you can see, we have a really
dark image, right? If I boost the ISO, I'm bringing in more
light into the camera. This is a very extreme scenario. But you can see that
downside of that is that it's like boosting sound
in your editing software, in your car where it
starts red lining and distorting that distortion
is called digital noise, which gets those little
dots that we talked about because the original
sound is being amplified, it creates these distortions. But like I said, it's perfect to make up for lack of
light in your scene.
10. Shutter Speed Fundamentals: Next after ISO for how we adjust the exposure is
our shutter speed, okay? And I have a cow because I have a funny way
of explaining it, because I think shutter
speed is a little bit harder of a principle
to understand. But I want to really
give you guys an example that will help
you always remember it. The basis is the slower our shutter speed
generally you'll see it one 50th of a second, 100th of a second, 200th of a second. The slower it is, the more blurry our image is going to be in
terms of motion, not in terms of sharpness or blurriness when it comes
to the quality of your lens. That's a different kind of
sharpness that's picking up on how crisp certain parts of the images are
without movement. Shutter speed is
adjusting the blurriness of movement and of
brightness of the image. Okay, so if we take
this cow example, let's imagine that
you have barn doors on a barn and you have cows. And these cows in this scenario
will be photons of light. All the light in this scenario that's hitting the
sensor of the lens. The aperture is going
to be adjusting how wide the opening is on the lens. Okay? The wider the aperture, the more light the more cows are going to be able to get into that barn and fill that barn. And the shutter speed is how quickly those barn doors
are opening and closing. The shutter is literally opening and closing inside your camera. Unless it's a mirrorless camera,
it's slightly different, but there's still ways to adjust for the shutter speed by they do it electronically. But that opening and
closing is literally happening in your camera
to adjust how much light, for how long, is
hitting that sensor. So a faster shutter speed
is going like this. There's not too many cows, not too much light being
able to expose that frame. If it's going like this,
you're going to have a lot of light photon cows getting into your sensor and brightening
your image, right? The higher the number, the less cows getting
into the camera, the less bright the image. The lower the number, the slower it's opening and closing. The more those cows
Can you stricken? The more those cows can come in. But the more blurry movement is going to be in your image. And I'll demonstrate this with my camera so
you guys can see. But a good rule of thumb is if you're doing something
that's action oriented, 100th of a second and
above is going to give you crisp movement
with motion 100th, and below is going to
give you a much more softer look with motion blur. Now you want your shutter speed to really double
your frame rate. All feature films
use this kind of golden rule to mimic the natural motion blur
that our eyes have. Every time we're doing that, we're naturally creating a more, what we call a cinematic image. Because the closer we mimic the eye with depth of field
and with motion blur, just the better if
image looks and the way that feature films
have learned how to do that, and it's kind of
industry standard, that if you start doing
it with your camera, you'll create that kind of cool, soft looking cinematic look is doubling your shutter speed. It doubles the frame rate
that you're shooting at. So if you're shooting
at 24 frames a second, ideally your shutter
speed is anywhere from 50 to a 60th of a second, okay? And if your frame rate is shooting at 60
frames per second, and we'll get into frame
rates, so don't worry, you want your shutter
speed to be around 120th for a similar natural
looking motion blur. Okay, all feature films use this guideline and this creates a motion blur that's
aesthetically pleasing with the information
that we just covered. Here's an example of
different shutter speeds. Now we have three
different images here of the same exact object that shot at different
shutter speeds. Now, can you guess
what this image here on the farthest left, what shutter speed that is? Would that be a high or
low shutter speed? Okay. Yes, it would be a
high shutter speed. So this was shot at
150th of a second. You see how it's not capturing any blur because the opening and closing of the lens is so fast that when it
exposed the image, it captured the moment so quickly that there
was no motion blur. Now, something in the middle. This is one 30th of a
second and you can see a slight blur because in
that one 30th of a second, and the camera really is
counting one 30th of a second, that pinwheel moved
that amount of time in that short amount
of one 30th in a second. If I go poop, and that's
one 500th of a second, the pinwheel thing is
not going to be able to move very far before
it gets exposed to. I think now that's probably
starting to make sense. And for this last one, obviously this is a very
slow shutter speed. This is one fourth of a second. So now I'm going
to demonstrate on my camera what that looks like.
11. Learning Exercise: Hands On with Shutter Sped: Perfect. So now you can see me here, or you
can see me there. You can see me here, or
you can see me there. So if we have, I'm going to kind of
change all the settings around here so that we're
working from scratch. Okay, so now we have our image and you can see
it's not very well exposed for you can see the brighter
parts of the image, which are these lights
in the background, but I am quite dark. If we start with our ISO here, we're going to start boosting
up the brightness, right? So we can kind see there that at about 800 this is a decently
exposed image, right? If we went really high, now we're over exposed
and you can probably see grain in the dark
areas of the frame. Okay, So let's bring
it back down to, let's say 800. Okay? And now let's look at the motion blur from
our shutter speed. You can see the blur
in my hand, right? If we move that
shutter speed to, say, a 200 of a second, you see that the image
is a lot darker. But you can see more of a strobe where each frame that's
getting exposed is very crisp. It creates this hyper
realistic look versus here, right, there's a lagginess. Okay. If we use our
golden rule that I just mentioned to create our most
cinematic looking softness, the right amount of motion
blur is going to be one 50th because I'm recording
it 24 frames a second. But now that I moved
my shutter speed from originally it
was here, actually, I think originally
it was here to what would look to have the right amount of motion
and now we're too dark. Okay. What I'm going
to do is boost the ISO so that the image
is looking well exposed, and that looks pretty good. One thing I haven't
mentioned yet, and it's in a different lecture, but I'll just briefly touch
on now, is the aperture. This is the opening and
closing of the lens. So if we have our
aperture set to 2.8, which is the widest
aperture on this lens, you're going to see a blurring in what is behind me and
what's in front of me. So this is going to be
slightly out of focus. And what's behind me is going to be slightly out of focus. If I turn up that aperture, it's going to close the
opening on the lens, not letting in as many cows, right, as you can see. But if I brighten up the image, okay, you're going to see that everything is a lot
more in focus, right? The before and after, you'll
see a very clear difference. Personally, I like to shoot at a wider aperture because it creates more of that
depth of field. Which means what's in
focus is very sharp. What's just before or
what's just behind, what's in focus
falls out of focus. Let me get the exposure right. Okay, but we're going to
get more into aperture.
12. Synthesizing Your Frame Rate, ISO, and Shutter Speed: That should give you an
overall good understanding of those main functions for your camera to really set
up the scene that you want. Ideally you're, you're setting your shutter speed to
a 50th of a second. If you're shooting at
24 frames per second, the apps on your phone
will let you change those manual settings of the frame rate that you're
shooting for, Talking videos, for logs, for anything that you're not shooting,
cutaway shots, of, which we'll get into when
it's someone talking, you pretty much
always want to be shooting 24 frames a second. That gives it a very natural aesthetic and really
pleasing looking shot. If you're shooting above that, like 60 frames a second, that's a lot better for slowing that stuff down and
doing slow motion. That doesn't look good
for talking shots. So the main takeaway here is that for your talking
scenes, in your logs, when you're shooting, when
you're talking to the camera, or when you're
interviewing someone else who's talking
to the camera. You want to have your frame rate set at 24 frames a second. You want to have your
shutter speed doubling that, which is going to be one 50th. It can be one 60th, okay? You want to have your
ISO as low as possible, because the higher the ISO, the more it's going to add
the noise into the image. But you use the ISO to boost what you're not
getting enough of light in your scenario when you have your other parameters set to that more cinematic
looking standard. And then you're going
to use your aperture to adjust how much you want the background or
foreground to be out of focus. So hopefully that makes sense. If you have any more questions about this portion of exposure, feel free to hop into the QNA and ask if you
have no questions. I will see you in
the next lecture.
13. Video Quiz: Understand Your Camera Latitude and Dynamic Range: Alrighty, and so
next up is latitude. Picture profile
and white balance. And again, like these
are just really, how do I say brief
understandings or fundamental understandings
so that we're all speaking the same language. And that when we get into
the actual filming process, you know exactly what
we're talking about. So latitude, right,
the amount of darkness and brightness
your sensor can expose for. Okay? It's the amount of
information that can be picked up in the bright and
dark areas of the image. The cheaper cameras
have a lower latitude, while more expensive cameras have a higher
amount of latitude. This is important to know and
the reason I bring it up is because you want to
know how much you can push your camera in
different scenarios, Whether you're standing by
a window to get lighting in on your face or your outdoors and it's
bright in the background. You want to have a general
idea of how to use your tool, which is your phone
or your camera. So that when you're creating
and wielding that tool, you know its exact capabilities. You know that if you
push it too much in this really bright scenario, that image that you're
going to be stuck with is it's not going
to look very good. So getting an idea of what latitude is and how it
works is really important. So let me ask which one of these images has a
better latitude, camera number one, or
camera number two? Now, don't pay attention to
the coloring or the tone, or the white balance
or anything like that. What we're looking for is let's look at the
dark area where, like the wooden poles are going from the dock into the water. You see on the left image where you can't really
see a whole lot. And then on the right image, you can see the difference
in the shadows. The wooden pole,
the boats that are underneath those
images of the frame. In the bright images
of the frame, if we look at the boat that's very bright on the image on
the left, it's blown out. But on the image on the right, we can really see the definition and
the information that's still being picked up. You can see it along
the water as well. So the answer to the
question is that yes, the camera on the right
has a better latitude. Okay. Coloring aside, that's not what we're paying
attention to here, but it's just the amount of information that you
can be exposed for, the background behind
you can be exposed for. It's really a big
part of what you're paying for when you
do buy a camera, is the amount of latitude, The amount of strength
that the sensor has to expose for these two
contrasted parts of the image. So I mentioned it
because it's just, it's an important understanding
to have and really get a feel for how much you can push your camera in dark
and bright scenarios.
14. Hands On: Picture Profile and My Personal Settings: Next up is the picture profile. This is the in camera stylizing that's put on top
of your footage. Okay. It's your camera adjusting
the overall sharpness, contrast saturation,
and white balance. The sharpness is how
much post processing, I don't know any other word
besides sharpness used. But kind of the clarity
that your camera can add to how sharp parts
of the image feel. The contrast is the
amount of difference between the darkest and the
brightest part of the frame. The more contrasty, the more punchy and the more
dark the darks are, the more the brights are. The saturation is how much
the tones and the colors, how vibrant they are in your image and then the
white balance will get into this is good to keep
in mind that this is baked into your
footage permanently. So if we are using a
picture profile on our camera and it's very contrasty and
it's very saturated, we're going to have to combat that or fight that
in post production. If we want to change
the look of the image, I highly recommend using a flat picture profile for the footage that
you're shooting. I haven't seen an app that you can do this
with for the phone. If you do have an
idea of an app that does that for smartphones,
please share it. But I do use it all
the time when I shoot. I pretty much shoot with
the same picture profile. Anytime I'm shooting
with my DSLR, actually. Yeah. Let me grab this camera real quick and show you guys. So if we see our
image here and we go to our picture profile style, we'll be able to see different picture profiles that have different aesthetics. It's a different adjusting
on the white balance, the contrast, the
saturation, et cetera. Depending on what kind
of camera you're using, you can go to the owner
of your camera's website. In this case it's Cannon. And you can Google their
flat picture profile. For Cannon, it's
called Log for Sony, I believe it's called S log.
It has a different name. Every company has their own picture profile that
you can download. They will give you a
flat less affected image going directly into your camera. If you don't have that for your camera that you're
using, don't worry. I generally shoot with my own
profile that I've created. That's really easy. It's just a neutral profile. If you go into the custom
setting that you can be able to do for the camera that
you're using them, you can always add a
custom picture profile for mine, it's neutral. I just go in and I turn
down the sharpness. Okay, I turned
down the contrast. Okay, turn down the saturation. Finally, I leave the
color tone as it is. You don't want to really
adjust the color tone that's changing the
value of certain colors. It'll make your image too
blue or purple or green. You don't really want to
mess with the color tone, but the basis is you go into your picture profile setting and you turn everything majority down so you have more
information that's unedited to work with in post production when you do
want to edit those things. Okay, and so hopefully
that gives you a general understanding
of picture profile. We'll go into that
stuff more when we're actually shooting
alongside each other and when I bring
on some guests in the course and I'm actually changing these
things in real time.
15. White Balance: So next up is our white balance. This is giving a specific
coloring to our image and it's giving a different value
to the quality of white. So the different kind of
presets that all cameras have, tungsten fluorescent,
natural lighting. All of these have a
different color temperature or Kelvin rating. Okay? The goal is to set
your picture profile, or excuse me, your
white balance, to a proper setting
for your environment. This makes the
colors more true to the surrounding rather than
blue or too yellow or warm. You want to have the
most neutral image as possible while
you're shooting, so that you can
change it and warm it up or make it more blue
in post production. But a good example of what
this looks like is this is the same image with different
white balance settings. Okay, so we have a much
more tungsten on the left, which creates a blue image
in the wrong setting. It's going to give a
wrong looking image in this kind of daylight or
kind of cloudy scenario. That preset makes
the truest colors possible because
that's the actual environment that
we're shooting in. So for this kind of situation, right now, we're shooting
manual White balance, which is a good extra
step that you guys can do to ensure that
your camera is not automatically choosing
the color value to be used in the scenario. Sometimes the audio
can get a little bit tricked by the coloring
because we have, you know, these
kind of tan lights. This tan light right here, a little bit of blue
light coming in from the window back there, and then this
relatively tan light. So I'm shooting a custom
white balance setting with 3,000 with the Kelvin or the color temperature set to 3,000 And I'll show you
what that looks like. Pull this ear. All right, so here's what it
looks like on Otto. You could see it's a
little bit more tan. Here's what it looks like
on the daylight setting, you can see it's getting
really warm 'cause it's thinking that I'm shooting
in an outdoor scenario. Here's what it looks like
with the shade preset, and here's what it looks
like with the cloudy preset. So you can see that the
coloring is way off, but I set it to 3,000
on manual because that is the best looking
color temperature for this scenario. So hopefully that
gives you an idea of how to use white
balance effectively. And how it's really
changing the overall aesthetic of your
image in your camera. So that in post production
you're not trying to battle the terrible looking coloring that happened while
you were shooting. I'm sure this has
happened to some of you can say as honestly
happened to me a lot. And that sums it up
for this lecture. In the next lecture,
we're going to be talking about aperture, focal length, and frame rate. So, if you have any questions, throw them in the
Q and A section. If not, I'll see you guys
in the next lecture.
16. Case Study: Aperture: Now you guys are almost
camera setting experts. Next up, what we're going to be talking about is aperture. It's a very important fundamental
understanding of how to get the most out of your
camera video settings. Aperture, simply put,
is the F stop number. The lower the F stop number. Right now I'm shooting
at 2.8 The wider the lens opening and the more amount of light is getting
into the camera. The higher the number,
the exact opposite. The less light, the
less depth of field. So let's explain
what that means. The higher the F stop, the smaller opening and
the less depth of field. This is great when you want
to make everything in focus. Like for landscape
shot action shots where there's a lot
of movement or a lot of things in the image you
want to have in focus. And really wide angle shots. The lower the F stop,
the lower the aperture. This has more depth of field. This is great for when
you want what is in focused to be sharp and what is closer and further
to be out of focus. This has a more
cinematic look and feel. This is great for controlled situations shots when
you're, you know, talking to the camera or you're shooting someone
that's talking to the camera because it
blurs out the background and makes the image
look more professional. So let me ask you here, which out of these
two images has a low F stop or aperture and
a high F stop or aperture? Image number one with this leaf and image number
two with this open landscape. Would you guess that
image number one with a leaf is a
wide aperture with a shallow depth of field or a narrow depth of field
with a high aperture. Okay. Perfect. Yes.
This is shot at F two. The aperture is wide open, so the leaf is in focus. What's behind it is blurred. This gives a really
great look and style. So we want to keep this in mind when we're going into
our own projects. Do we want to have, you know that everything is in
focus look that's more action oriented or
are we shooting like some park or video where someone's doing back
flips off a bridge? Maybe, maybe not. So
this image on the right, if you had to guess the F
stop, what would you guess? Would it be? F 4f5f, ten, F 15. It's got to be up
there pretty high. So let's see, F 22. That's why the rocks that are only a few feet away
from the camera are just as in focus as that mountain that's
hundreds of feet away from the camera. So hopefully that gives
you an idea of when to use a wide aperture and when to
use a high or low aperture. Right now, I'm shooting at F 2.0 which is a relatively
low aperture. Because I know I want
to be in focus and I want the background
to be blurry, right? I'm not shooting this really
cool mountain landscape, so I'm not at F 22
plus I'm not out in a really bright scenario
with broad daylight. You're going to need a
really high aperture and that's going to give you
a properly exposed image.
17. Case Study: Focal Length: Next up is the focal
length or the angle of view that lets in
light into the camera. Okay? The millimeter, the M M on your lens
equals the millimeter. And the shorter
that MM number is, the shorter the focal length or the wider the angle of view. A 22 millimeter is a really relatively
wide angle of view, while a 200 millimeter, which is a much higher number, is a much more
narrow field of view or a much more
telephoto type lens. Wider is for more
action oriented, a fun and playful feel. Generally, Youtube videos
are shot on a much wider. Right now we're
shooting at about 22:24 This gives a wider
feel if it's something that's more documentary style or something where
you're shooting something off in a distance, you're going to want to use a telephoto lens so you can get a much more zoomed in look and a shallower
depth of field. So the overall wider is more desirable for a Youtube
and Instagram style, while a telephoto
is like, you know, shooting things like
wedding style or more of a documentary style
or more of something where you want to have a more
professional look. Okay. The wider the angle, the less depth of field, the
more everything's in focus. The shallower or the
higher the focal length, The shallower than
the field of view. Also the shallower,
the depth of field. What's in focus is clear. What's out of focus
is very blurry. So let me ask, let's get back to this leaf
and mountain image here. Which angle here is a wide angle and which
one is a telephoto? Is the leaf wider Telephoto. Okay. Now, if you're
guessing that, what would you guess
would be the millimeter of this shot of the leaf? Would it be a 20
millimeter, 50 millimeter? 10150200. Let's see. Okay. So this
is a 200 millimeter lens. You can tell that the
camera is probably, yeah, six to eight, or nine
feet away from that leaf. But it's zoomed in and creating a very crisp image with
a soft background. Now, if we look at
this mountain image, would you put this
as a ten millimeter, 30 millimeter,
405080 millimeter? It's probably going to be on
the much lower end because it's a pretty wide
angle. So let's see. Yep, that's a 20 millimeter, That's why we can see such a wide field of
view in this landscape. So hopefully that's
making sense. You're able to kind of
compile this together. Of course, I'm going
to be demonstrating this later in the course. This is getting us to
the point where we're all speaking the same language.
18. Case Study: Frame Rate: Let's hop in a frame rate, this is the amount of frames
that shot per second. Okay? The way each frame
rate looks has to do with the way our eyes see
and perceive the world. Our eyes, yes, the eyes in our head most closely see
to 24 frames per second. This is normal life speed with the natural motion
blur of your eye. If you look at your
hand and you do this, you're going to see that there's a slight motion blur that
your eye is actually seeing. Now, if I'm shooting
at 24 frames per second on my
camera or my phone, there's going to be a similar
motion blur if we have the shutter speed at
the proper level. And so the frame rate
really has to do with the way it looks is in comparison to what
your eye normally sees. Hopefully, that's making sense. This causes a similar
motion blur that is similar in detail to moving objects
that are ICs films. Choose to shoot 24 as
their standard style of frame rate because it creates that pleasing look that your
eye is naturally used to. This is a soft, a
little surreal, and 24 has this really cool
film esque appearance. Now, on the other hand, 30 frames per second. We'll try not to get
too technical here, but this has more of a realistic
broadcast TV home movie, kind of almost fake
feeling, yeah. You know news stations, old VHS camcorders
for home movies, they have this kind
of like weird, fake, non real feeling. And you see a news anchor
and it looks very plasticky. That's because
they're shooting all at 30 frames per second. And even though that's only
six frames per second, faster than 24, it really
does change the look. So I personally don't recommend ever shooting
at 30 frames per second. There's not really a need,
unless you're really going for that stylistic choice for a specific purpose, stick to 24. Next up is 60 frames
a second, okay? This is almost doubling the normal speed of life
at 24 frames a second. 60, you're doubling
the frame rate, which is perfect for action. It has this very high definition look because
it's picking up twice as many pictures per
second or frames per second, but it can feel a
little plasticy if it's for a talking interview. Okay. So the way and the
reason you would use that if you wanted to slow down that footage
in post production, for a slow motion like montage or cutaway shots,
which we'll talk about, but it just gives it a
much different feeling when you have that frame rate. Okay, because you're doubling what you would normally see. And lastly, 120 to
240 frames a second, you're rarely going
to shoot like this. But this is really cool. For really epic, slow motion, dramatic style
footage, that's when you would want to use a
really high frame rate of 120 to 240. So hopefully that
gives you a kind of idea for when and where to use, what kind of frame rate. Now what I'm going to do
is switch over my camera 24-30 and to 60 so you guys can see the
aesthetic difference. All right, so now we're
at 30 frames a second. It'll be a slight difference. A slight little change. And there's a lawn
mower outside, so I apologize, I'm hoping it doesn't pick
up too much on the mice. But yeah, right now we're
at 29.97 frames per second, which is 30 frames per second. And yeah, you can kind
of see the difference. Now let's go to 60
frames per second, or in some cases, 59.94
frames per second. And so now that's a
pretty big difference because we're doubling
our frame rate. And if I wanted to now, I can slow this down in
post production like this. So you can see it
creates a much, very dramatic style of effect. So you won't want to use
60 frames when you're filming someone
because it kind of has a little bit
of a plastic look. So if we pop back over
to 24 frames a second, so as you can see, it's a much more natural look and
feel at 24 frames a second. But I'm hoping that this
gives you guys a really, really solid understanding
of how to use your camera settings
without any of the extra fluff or stuff that you really
don't need to know. But this will really get you
off the ground and able to shoot in any scenario with whatever kind of camera
you're shooting with. So now in the next lecture, we're going to do a
learning exercise where you guys are going
to be able to apply these actual understandings and techniques to your own
shoot and project. So I will see you guys in
the next learning exercise.
19. Camera Settings Activity Introduction: Now that you really understand the fundamentals of
your video settings, for your camera and
for your phone, it's time to apply all this information
that we just learned. So it's your turn. So what we're going to do is we're going to do a
learning exercise on shooting one shot in two
different ways, okay? What we're going to do is
choose one subject, or object, or scene, or whatever
you want to shoot, and we're going to shoot it
two different ways, Okay? The first way is going to
be on auto settings or improper settings. Okay? The information
before what you learned in this
course so far, okay? So, over exposed, the
ISO is all wrong, the shutter speed is all wrong, or the aperture is not really ideal for what
you're shooting. And then you're going to
shoot it a second way, which is going to
be the upgraded way with what the information
that you learned so far. So what I want you to really
do is apply yourself on this learning exercise and use the proper ISO shutter speed, picture profile, white balance, aperture, and focal length. You guys are more
than welcome to do either a video of you talking or a photo of an object that's at
your house or outdoors. Really, whatever you want
something to get creative with. And you're going to
export that video link or screen shot with the standard shot first and then the upgraded shot
to the course Q and A. And share your before and after not using what
you've learned, or maybe the way you would
have shot it before, and then using these
techniques to shoot something in a much more
aesthetically pleasing way. So I'm going to cut
to me doing this too right now along with
you guys at my own house. I'm going to choose
something to shoot. I'm going to shoot
at the improper way, and then I'm going to shoot
a second, much better image.
20. Learning Exercise: ISO and White Balance: The first thing I'm going to
do is with my Smartphone. I'm going to, so I'm going
to find something at my house and I'm
going to shoot it with like improper settings. And I'm going to
do screen capture so you guys can see
exactly what I'm doing. And then I'm going
to shoot it with the proper settings and show
you the before and after. So let's see what we can find. All right, so we
have our first image here on my smartphone and we could see our
shutter speed is at 24 frames per second. Our white balance
is at tungsten, so there's kind of this
weird purplish hue to it. And so our, you know, auto white balance is set to the improper setting for
this type of environment. And our ISO is pretty high
for this kind of scenario. So what I'm going to do first is start with the shutter speed, and I'm going to go to 50th, And then I'm going to move
to our white balance here. And I'm going to go to manual now I'm going to go and
I'm going to set this, see that's a little too blue, the Kelvin rating is too low. I'm going to go at
about 3,500 here. I'm going to tap on
where we want to focus. I'm going to check the ISO here. Bring the ISO down
just a little bit. Perfect. Here's my before, here's my after shot.
21. Learning Exercise: Using Focal Length to Enhance Your Shot: All right, for
this next example, we have this painting here, and now I'm shooting on my DSLR. Let's see if we first start with focusing on the focal length
aspect of our settings. If I zoom in here and
change the focal length, we see a little bit of change in the overall
depth of field and the overall stylizing
of really picking up on the depth and the
texture of this image. If we zoom back out, we're at 24 frames. Let's get our settings right. Let's first start by opening up our aperture from a 9.0 to 2.8 This is going to give us a much more shallow and
stylized depth of field. Now we're going to drop
our ISO to something. Let's say 12 50. Let's say 12 50. And we can now see
that we're getting a little bit more of a
shallow depth of field. We can see that this painting in the fore ground is in focus, while this one in the
back is out of focus. And now we can come back to
this one being in focus. And to accentuate
this look even more, we can change our
focal length from a 24 millimeter to something
like a 70 millimeter. So that now we really have this cooler
style depth of field, right where we can really focus in on the depth of this image. This really kind of more
textured image compared to this much more flat image
of the same exact object is an example of using our different settings
to really try and create a better looking
and stylized image of what we're shooting.
22. Learning Exercise: Using Depth of Field: All right, so for this example, welcome to my kitchen. That's where the magic happens. Let's see what we got in here. I'm going to grab
this, some tumeric. I'm going to set it
right down here. So if we focus, we have the camera was just
automatically set to the aperture at 11, the shutter speed at
a 50th and the SO at 1,250 So let's see here, since we're shooting at a DSLR, let's focus on aperture
for this example. Let's get the
exposure right then. I'm going to take a photo
of this example, Okay? Now I'm going to get the same proper exposure with
different settings. What I'm going to
do is bring down the aperture so we have a
much wider depth of field. And then I'm going to bring down the ISO so that we're not
getting over exposed, and then our image
is actually going to be a lot less grainy. Then I'm going to set the focus, can even go down further
on the aperture. Now I'm going to take
the same exact photo. You can see how that
simple difference of changing the aperture, even if you're getting
the same exposure value, that simple change
in settings makes a much more dramatic
and stylized image. Let's see the before and
afters of these examples. Now I'm excited to
see what kind of examples that you
upload that are your before and after examples in
the student Q and A section. I'll see you in
the next lecture.
23. Hands On with Studio Lighting: Initial Set Up and Camera Settings: All right, what's up guys? So at this portion
of the course, we should be very comfortable
with our camera settings. And today I'm with the
wonderful Kimber Lea. Hi. She's an amazing Youtuber. She has her own business. She's an entrepreneur,
and today we're going to be working at her
studio, her space. And I'm going to walk
you guys through really start to finish on
the proper camera settings, the right lens to use, and really how to set up your environment in a
natural light scenario. And in this scenario
which is going to be an artificial light scenario. So I'll have a
montage that shows Kimberlaa's content
and her channel. You guys can check her out. Thanks. Great, we're
going to keep that in. So with that said,
let's get started. So what we're going
to start with, this is our before shot, so I'm going to go ahead
and hit record here. So we have an actual
reference of what we start with and then the final
product that we end with. So here we can see that
Kimberlaa, a wonderful subject, she's kind of pushed up
against the background Here we're using our natural
ambient light in our scenario. Not a good thing.
And we also have our settings not with
the proper exposure. So what we're going
to start with first is by increasing our ISO. So we're going to
boost our ISO to get a little bit of
a better exposure. We don't want to get the exposure too high
because we still haven't turned on the lighting that we're going
to be using here. Let's first start getting a proper settings for
our shutter speed. Now we're at a 50th of a second, which is going to be
perfect because of we're shooting at 24 frames a second. Let's start with first
adding one key light. I'm going to flip
on this perfect, and the next thing that I'm going to do is I'm going to cut away the excess ambient
light that we have in here. Because these tube lights, I think they're called
fluorescent lighting, is not a good thing. You never want to be using
fluorescent lighting. So, and so we're looking
a little bit better here, but what we're going
to first do is because these lights
are relatively cool, the Kelvin temperature is quite cold for this
lighting set up. So what we're going
to do here is scroll to our white
balance setting. And then we're going
to go to manual. Okay? And we're going to set
it at about 4,800 And so now we still have
pretty harsh shadows. So what we're going to do is turn on our fill light,
which we have right here. Okay, so what this
is going to do is this fill light is going to fill in the shadows on the face. All right, and we're
going to change the exposure. How are you doing? Kimber, Fine, perfect.
You're doing really good. Way better than A. Now we have our ISO at 500, which is giving us a
nice even lighting. We have our shutter speed
at a 50th of a second. We also have our aperture at 2.8 Now what
this is going to do is it's going to
help us blur out the background when we
change our focal length. Because right now we're at 24. If we were to zoom in
and now we're at 50, you can see that she's
perfectly in focus and the background is falling off because
it's slightly blurry. This is already looking a lot better than our
before and after. Here's the before and
here's the after. Like that magical editing
edition in there. Yeah, Yeah, right. The snaps in the claves, baby. The snaps in the claves. So this is already
looking really good. But what I want to do now
is another trick is luckily her outfit is already very contrasted from
the background. If she was wearing
a white shirt in this scenario and we wanted to shoot a really
good looking video, I would definitely
have her change her outfit today. It's perfect. So we're not going to do
that for this scenario, but what we want to do is move her away from
the background. This is going to create
more of a separation and allow for the
background to be more blurry and a little bit, it's going to be a little bit darker depending
on the lighting, but it's going to fall off more. So let's do that now. So I'm going to zoom out a little bit. Kimber layer a wonderful
model and you can stand up and we're going to push
it a little bit forward. Now that we're changing
where our subject is, we also have to kind of change our lighting a little bit because it's going
to change the angle. Okay, Perfect. Now I'm going to move the
camera back a little bit so we can get a similar
framing to what we want. And I'm going to zoom in, so
that's looking pretty good.
24. Hands On with Studio Lighting: Rule of Thirds and Focal Length: So now I'm actually really
happy with this lighting and the distance that she that Kimberley has from
the background. It's creating a nice separation. We're at a low aperture, which means we have a very
shallow depth of field. We're framing her
on the top third, which is actually another thing I want to mention real quick. What makes the most pleasing
image possible is when you frame important areas of
your image on the third. So there's an imaginary line
going across the top third, the bottom third, the
right, and then the left. You see how we have her
framed on the top third. Now if I were to change this framing and
put her in the middle, you see we still
have great lighting, we still have great coloring. The background
looks really nice, but the framing throws out
the aesthetic of the image. So that's something I really want you guys
to keep in mind, is that it's always
most comfortable, especially with
the talking scene, to frame your subject
on the top third. Now personally, right now
we're at a 50 millimeter. This looks great for an
average talking video. If we want something that's maybe a little bit more serious, we can go here to 70 where we're even
closer to our subject. If we want something
that's a little bit more fun, of course, we're dealing with the outside
stuff that we have here. Yeah, we have some workout
equipment and stuff, so we can't really get
a super wide angle. But I want to show you
guys what that looks like. So if we have this wide angle, we frame here on the third, we always want to have
the camera pretty much at eye level for our
subject in an interview because we're giving the viewer the feeling
that they're at the same level of their
person that's talking. If I'm talking to
the camera right now and I'm talking
from down here, it feels a little bit weird if you're the audience
looking at that. And if I'm talking from up here, looking down on you, feels
a little bit weird as well. So we always want
to try to frame our camera at the same
eye level as our subject, so we can go a little bit lower because
we're shooting wide. And I'm going to
push in a little bit minus the background
stuff that's here. This is a lot more of a fun, less professional look,
which is great for you tube. Right now that's
at 28 millimeters, we can go even a
little bit wider and that's at 24 millimeters. The wider, the more playful, the more zoomed in,
the more serious.
25. Hands On with Studio Lighting: High Key, Low Key, and Rim Lighting: Now that we have this set
up, this looks great. At 50 millimeters, our F stops
at 2.8 Now this lighting scenario that we started
with for this example is called high key lighting. That's because our key light is basically all the way on and our fill light is
all the way on. And that's giving a very bright like beauty blogger
style that is really, actually works really
well for women. Because if you think
of like a mob boss, like a sopranos or something, they're always
going to have very dramatic low key lighting. So let's kind of
experiment here and see the different kind of
lighting scenarios that we can get depending on
the look you're going for. And what I want to mention is if your video vibe is bright
and happy and you're doing like an unboxing video for some type of thing,
you know, hold on. Yeah, I'm like, wait,
what am I trying to say? If you're doing an unboxing video for some type of product, you want bright, good
lighting from both sides. If you're doing something
that's a lot more moody, maybe it's a documentary, something that's more
stylized, more cinematic. You want to have
actually the majority of your lighting only coming
from one side of the subject. So let's kind of
experiment here. I'm going to turn down this
light all the way now. We can instantly
see that we have high lights on the subjects
left side of the face, her right, our left. And we can see the difference
between this style of low key lighting versus this
style of high key lighting. So what we're going to do
now is, like I mentioned, we have a really cool, more contrasting looking
light set up. And what I want to
do is a, excuse me, add a rim light, or it's also called a hair
light, which is, especially because she has
dark hair and a dark shirt, it's going to add a
really nice high light to our subject that's going to separate them even more
from the background. So let's go ahead and see
what that looks like. I'm going to grab this light, Hopefully this one works. Yeah. I'm going to
grab this light here. And the reason I
actually moved it from this side to this side is because our main light source is here, this side of the face. If I do the rim light here, then there's going
to be the main light source from this angle. And then the rim light,
it actually looks better to have light
and dark contrasting. So we'll see what
that looks like. And the key to this is not to be lighting the front
of the subject. We already have that squared
away and looking good, so let's see what
that looks like. And here's the before,
and here is the after. A.
26. Hands On with Studio Lighting: Upgrade Your Shot with Practicals: So what we have here is our
main light source and then we have a little bit of a softer light to
fill in her shadows, so it's not too dramatic. And I actually want to
take a look and see what it looks like with
this completely off. So for this scenario,
it's too dark. That's not the kind of like
vibe that we're looking for, especially with like
Kimberley's style of video, that would be too dramatic, but if we have a really cool
moody scene in our film, having one light source with a hair light
would be perfect. But let's flip this back on. That's giving a little bit of fill for our shadows,
which is perfect. And now I want to kind of add a little bit of extra
touch to the background. So we've done a lot of
work with moving her, getting her to the
right position, getting the proper focal length. Now I want to show you guys something that's
called practicals. Now, practicals are simply a light source in
the background of the scene that
you're shooting that doesn't have the purpose
of lighting the subject. The only purpose that it has is adding a warm kind of glow and making the scene look
a little bit more realistic because we have
all these different lights, and if there's no
light behind her, it kind of can look a little
bit artificial manufactured. So in feature films they use
what's called practicals. Having lamps on in
the background, having lights on
in the background. This subconsciously gives the
viewer a little bit more of a belief as to why the lighting kind of looks
so good in the situation, and it gives it a little bit
more energy, in my opinion. So let's go ahead and see
what that looks like. Stay on. Yeah. If it stays on. Okay. We're in business.
Yeah, that's fine. That's one practical and
the second practical. Like I mentioned, this is not helping any lighting
directly on our subject. This is just livening
up and making the background look a
little bit more realistic. So let's take a look at this angle and see
what that looks like. So this is with the practicals, and this is without
the practicals. So I'm a huge fan of that. It really just kind of adds a little bit more special sauce to the scene that
you are shooting.
27. Hands On with Studio Lighting: Colored Gels: So I actually wanted
to add one more thing. We got our practicals,
we got our set looking great, the
lighting looks good. I will mention that the nature of these lights is quite blue. So one thing that I really
wanted to share with you, that you can get around this kind of more
bluish lighting, because it can have its
drawbacks if we are lighting our subject and her frontal lighting
is this bluish light. But let's say we're in
a different scenario and there's daylight
in the background. That daylight is going
to be extra warm because our white balance is set to make her
lighting look neutral. The background is going to
change color wise a lot. So in this scenario, we're going to
actually get a little bit more of tan lighting, which is actually really
great for talking footage. And it's going to be really good for you to see
this demonstration as well if you have different
color temperatures on set, sorry, just spit everywhere different color temperatures on set that you're working with. So what we're going to
use is colored gels. Okay. And I'll just
kind of briefly run over how to set it
up on your light. Now you want to make sure you're not putting these on a
light that gets hot. These lights don't heat up, so we're not going
to have any issues. But this will melt as if you put it in a microwave
on your light. Before trying this, you want to make sure your
lights don't get too hot. This is a little bit warm, but it's not going
to be an issue. We want to cover our
entire light with our gil. And you can see the
difference on my face here. You can already see the kind of effect this is going to have. Okay. And we're going to
put one more down here, La. Now we're also going to
add a gel to this side. And this is going
to really soften up our scenario for two reasons. It's going to diffuse
the light and take down the intensity of our
main lights a few stops. So we're going to
definitely have to change the exposure
on our camera and we're definitely
going to have to change our white
balance on this light. We're going to do the
same thing again. This light does not heat up. We are good to attach our gel directly to
the light source. Now, if we look at our
scene, it's a lot softer, but you can see now it's
a very warm scenario. We're going to
start by increasing our ISO to get the
proper exposure. We are going to then change
our white balance to match our new color
situation right there. Now you can see the
difference between without the colored gels and
with the colored gels. A lot softer, a lot
more of a warm feel. And just taking away that
studio lighting set up, it's really effective to
use if you want to match the color temperatures
of your situation. Now, I do want to
mention that we didn't add a gel
to our hair light. It's going to make the
hair light stand out even more because the color temperature is
completely different, which can work for you. Sometimes a golden
hair light looks really nice,
sometimes it doesn't. You really have to use
your own discernment for your shooting
situation. Cool. So that wraps it up for our artificial lighting
set up scenario. So I think you guys should have some really good tips
and tricks to take your set up that
you're shooting from this beginning looking stage
to now this final set up. Perfect. Now, in
the next lecture, we're going to do the similar
kind of lighting set up, but we're going to be
using only natural light. So I will see you in
the next lecture.
28. Hands On with Natural Lighting: Choose Your Set: So before we hop into actually filming Kimberlaa
for this section, I wanted to just do a brief run through of the environment
that we're shooting in. So that way you can better relate to this type of
scenario where you're at your house and you're
looking at your scenario and you want to shoot a good looking
image that's a lot more, well a good looking scene or scenario that's a
lot more casual. So if we take a wide shot and get to
see this entire place, we can see that there's three primary natural
sources of light. And this is the
most important part of choosing where you want to
shoot in your environment. Here is the first option. We would have the subject
facing the window so that the majority of the light would be
hitting their face. Of course the problem
with that is if we flip around this backdrop and
here doesn't look so good, we have, you know, this kind
of stuff in the background, it doesn't look
very clean, right? So if we go to our next option, this is our second
primary source of light. What we might be able
to do here is open up this window so that we can have the subject
facing the light. But as you can see
from this image, there's really not
a whole lot of natural light coming in
through this window, at least at this time of day. So that's something
that you want to keep in mind is are
you shooting at noon? Are you shooting at sunset? What side of your house is getting light? At
which time of day? If you're going to choose
a more permanent set up at your house
using natural light, that is something
you really want to keep in mind is, you know, what time of day do you
want to shoot and how is the lighting at that
time of day here, if we were to set up
the subject here, have the lighting, it doesn't
work without really having to move around the different
things at this house. Option two is really
out of the question. Now, if we go to option
three over here, we have this source of light that is coming in with
a lot of diffused light. We have Kimberlay in the
background doing her thing. So we have this large
natural light right here. And the reason I
went for this in this situation was
because we have a light source that's getting great quality light for a lot of the different
times of day. The way that the light is bouncing off the
other buildings, the white fence outside is perfect for what
we're looking for. The other reason I
chose to do this, and the other thing you
want to keep in mind is how much can you control the lighting in the background of you when you're shooting in the natural light scenario? Here we're able to
really cut the light, meaning we keep the
exposure of what is behind me very low, okay? And then we can add
practicals that in that you'll see in the
following learning lesson of what the
practicals are doing. And this is really
the most ideal set up for this person's
house, for Kimberly's place. So you're going to have
a few different options at your house or wherever
you want to shoot, you want to look at
all your options. In this case, we had three. We weighed out the pros
and cons of each option, and then we go ahead and
choose where we want to shoot. Get our set up in, get
our settings right, and get everything dialed in. Which is what you're
going to see in the next learning lesson.
29. Hands On with Natural Lighting: Initial Set Up and Camera Settings: For this set up. What we're
going to be doing is where kimba's place and this set up is going to be
a little bit more difficult and a little
bit more on the go. I wanted to give you
an example of if you don't have an
artificial lighting source, you don't have any
external lighting. Or you wanted to do
something that maybe looked a little bit more
casual and a little bit less produced using natural light is perfect
for that kind of scenario. So what we're going
to be doing is taking a look in
this situation to find where we can find a really good source of natural light coming
through a window, coming through a doorway. And then we're also
going to, of course, use proper focal
length, proper framing. But more importantly,
we're going to use exposure, contrast, and separation from
our subject to the background to really create
an image that looks good. Because we don't have a
rim light or a hair light, and we don't have
bright artificial light to really make it look good. So with that said,
we're going to take Kimber Lea and we're going
to choose a backdrop. And then we're going
to set everything up with the proper settings. So what we're going to
do is actually take this area of the house and
turn this into the set up. So right now it doesn't
really look like much, but what we're going to
do is open up this door. This is a huge, natural diffused
lighting scenario. Because we're not
getting direct light from the sun that would
create harsh shadows. We have the sun bouncing
off white walls. We have the sun
bouncing off the fence, which is going to be
perfect for getting really soft looking
natural light. So the next thing that
we're going to do is look at the direction that
we're going to be filming, because this is our
main lighting source. We want to have our subject obviously facing
that main source. But we want to keep in mind what is going to be
in the background. So what I'm going to
do is want to set up this camera about a boom. So I'm going to go ahead and
hit record on this camera to see what we're working with
here with the backdrop. Of course for this
scenario I would generally have a little bit
more of a minimal background, but for something
that's really easy. And if you guys want to pull out the camera to film a
video at your house, we're focusing more on getting a good lighting set up and how to really
use natural light. Don't focus too much on the background for
this kind of scenario. So now that I know
where I want to shoot because we have this really
nice natural lighting set up, we're going to do a
before shot before we go into making the footage
actually look good. So here's kimbala in, we're not paying attention to setting a good
focal length where our exposure is off and really the lighting
is just not good. So we're going to start from
scratch and really build this up to a really good before
and a really good after. And now first step, oh, we are opening the door
and not hitting the wall. Perfect. So now we have a really
good natural light source and we're shooting at
24 frames a second. And we're going to move our
shutter speed up to one 50th, so we're doubling the
speed of our frame rate. That's going to give us a really nice natural
motion blare. Now the other thing that
I'm going to do is open up our aperture all the way because we don't have
any external lighting. It's going to be really
important to have a shallow depth of field to make this image look
as good as possible. So I'm going to open up all the way and I'm going to
zoom in a little bit. Kimberly, you can step forward. Yep. Okay. And I'm going
to raise the camera up. This is going to be her
new style of shooting. She's going to always be
standing in her future videos, so check out her Youtube
channel for that. Okay, So this is looking
pretty good already. Our white balance is
already set pretty good. But let's just, if we move
it up just a little bit, our Kelvin rating temperature
is going to be at 5,000 That's looking good.
30. Hands On with Natural Lighting: Optimizing Background and Aperture: If we want to have a
more intimate feeling, of really feeling connected to our audience
while we're talking, we would want a closer
angle like this. Of course, you want to frame
the eyes on the third, if we want something, let me
move that up a little bit. If we want something
a little bit more informal or a little bit
more fun and less planned, we would shoot wider like that. This is looking
pretty good so far. I think the next thing that
what we would be doing in this situation is taking a look at what in the
background we can turn down to create even
more separation between her and the background. So what I'm going to do
is flip these lights off. So we're turning on a
practical in the background, of course is not going to help
with lighting our subject, but it's going to make the background feel
a lot more alive. So now we have more
light in the background and because we're using natural lighting
in this situation, we're not getting that
really good rim light that we got in the other shot. So one of the tricks
that I really want to show you guys is if you can't create enough exposure contrast in camera by turning on
lights in the background, by getting a light on
your subject better, What you can do is change the shirt color or the color of the clothes that your
subject is wearing. So Kimberle is
going to go switch her shirt really quick
to create more contrast. Very good. So as you can
see we have Kimberlaa. She changed her outfit to create more contrast
with the background, which makes her as the
subject stand out more. And we have this practical
light on the back left, and we have this practical
light on the back right. So you can see the before
and after, before and after. So now that we really got our framing and our
lighting really nailed, I want to show you guys the
difference between having a very shallow depth of field, a wide aperture, and having a very narrow aperture
with less depth of field. And how big of a difference that makes with a shooting
scenario like this. So what I'm going to do is I'm going to increase our aperture, which is going to
bring down our depth of field and it's going to make everything in the frame
a lot more in focus. And I'm going to bring
up the ISO to make up for that increase
in aperture, so I can get the exposure right. And so here you can see
the difference between an F ten with the subject
and the background, and the difference between an F 2.8 with the subject
and the background.
31. Hands On with Natural Lighting: Proper Framing, Focal Length, and Distance: So right now we're
at 28 millimeters, and I want to touch
on focal length before we wrap up
this learning lesson. So this is a really
comfortable framing. She's framed on the
third, so we're at a good distance where if she
was talking to the camera, explaining something, we
would be able to connect with her and it would look
aesthetically pleasing. If we were to go from
28 millimeters to something much more zoomed
in like 60 millimeters, this is a completely
different focal length that creates a completely
different feeling. She didn't move,
the camera didn't move what she would be
doing when it changed. But this would completely
change the way you would feel about
what she was saying. So it's something
to really keep in mind when you're setting
up your framing. You want to always
be thinking about how you want your
viewer to feel. So if I move it back out
to a little bit wider, this is now we're at 24, which is a little bit too
wide for the situation. But what I want to
do before we wrap up here is of course, when we just went to
60, it was too close. But if we move the camera further back and keep our
subject where they are, and now what we did was we moved about ten feet
away from our subject. And we zoomed in
to 70 millimeters. So at five feet away
from our subject, 70 millimeters was
way too close. But with ten feet distance, if you have that kind of room to move around
in your scenario, you can actually get a really
great compressed image with a very shallow depth of field by moving far back and increasing
your focal length, making the number go higher, which creates a much more
telephoto field of view. So you guys can see the
difference between five feet away at 28 millimeters and now ten feet away
at 70 millimeters. Same scenario,
different focal length, different distance from
the subject to the camera. Completely different aesthetic.
32. Full Summary of Hands On Exercises: Perfect. And so that wraps
it up for the session with Kimberley and I. I will
link her Youtube channel, all her social media on
the page right here, you guys can click and check out all of the offerings
that she has. And I wanted to just recap
really quickly all of our before and after shots that
we did in this session. So here is the before and after with our artificial
lighting setup. You can see with and without the colored gels and with and
without using a hair light. The two different options of having high key lighting
and low key lighting, here are the examples that we shot in natural
light are before, where we're not using
the lighting properly in our surroundings with and without practicals
in the background. And shooting at 28 millimeters
versus 70 millimeters, with more distance between
our camera and our subject. That about wraps it up for
this portion of lighting, camera types, lens choice, focal length, and focus in
this part of the chorus. I will see you in
the next lecture.
33. Learning Exercise: Filming Your Talking Scene: All right, so now that
you guys have been able to really see
behind the scenes, look at how I choose
my backgrounds, choose my lighting scenarios, set all the functions and
settings on my camera. Now it's your turn.
It's your turn to film a talking scene with your
phone or your camera. And something that I want you
guys to keep in mind while going through this
learning exercise is that ideally you're actually talking to the camera
and we'll be using your words or the topic
that you're talking about to create a shot
list of cutaway shots. Basically, it'll look
something like this, but I am addicted to coffee. I just love the entire
experience of it, those lovely texture deans, and then brewing it
when you pour that off. So it's pretty straightforward. Now it's your turn to shoot. You're going to film one talking shot in two different
ways, okay? The first way is going
to be the standard shot. Without any of the techniques that we've discussed
so far in this course. This might be the way that
you would film your video normally without
having any idea of these new techniques
and principles. And then the second
way is going to be your upgraded shot with these new techniques
that you've learned. And that's going to be framing
shot type focus, exposure, distance between the subject
and the background, right, using a contrast in coloring, using lighting, and using
good sound techniques. Then you're going to
export your video link or screen shots with the standard and upgraded shot one after the other to
the course Q and A. That way you can engage with your classmates, they
can engage with you. You guys can critique
each other's work, and you can all see
how you can improve on your talking video shot
for all your future videos. So hopefully that
makes sense and I will see you guys in
the next lecture.
34. Introduction to Learning Session with a Professional Filmmaker: This section is really about
taking things a step deeper. Now that we have a
good understanding of the settings and other
specific camera techniques, I wanted you to be able
to get some real life learning from someone who's taken their career a long ways. And is also creating
content that is really relevant for today's type of video creator where he's using film techniques mixed with shooting with modern equipment. So it's going to be
a really cool one on one sit down discussion
and advice from an expert that's really
going to give you some essential tools to take into the rest
of this course. Sit back, get out your pen
and pencil or your note pad. There's a lot of
good truth bombs in these next two
learning lessons. So let's get into it.
35. Case Study: Breakdown of Cinema iPhone Project: Cool. So Hunter,
thank you so much for coming on as a guest speaker
for this part of the course. So far, the students have really doven into how to
use lighting and how to really set
up their camera to get the best looking
video possible. And you've been on my
radar for a while and, you know, we've kind
of connected on a few projects here and there. But I saw your iphone
commercial, let's just call it. And it's really the perfect
part of the course and really the perfect topic
that I wanted to have. You want to kind of speak and go through that amazing project that I saw and give some tips. Give things that
are applicable for smartphone shooters and all
types of new filmmakers. That sounds exciting, dude.
Thanks for having me. Yeah, of course. And then what's just maybe a little
mini background. I'll have some cutaway shots, some montage of your Instagram, your website, what's
like, you know, your elevator picture of, you know, where you are today. Yeah. So to your
listener, my name Hunter. I run a business called
Unemployed Movement currently. And I've been in the digital marketing and content
creation industry, if you want to call it that,
for about seven years now. And I've gone through kind of different models
that I worked in an agency right out of school in Colorado and that was like
in the action sports world. And then moved to California
and was a freelancer doing a lot of
freelancing content, whether that's making
social media content, doing photography jobs. A lot of my, I
think unique skill lies in digital marketing. I think that's a little bit
of a differentiation factor between like a filmmaker
because I do come from more of the marketing
background in the sense of like shooting courses
and managing podcasts. More so than I
guess you can say, like the creative industry to bring up the concept of
the iphone videos and why. I actually put a
little bit more energy into understanding
that type of stuff. Because this is a little
less equipment heavy, right? We're not using like
DSLRs or cinema cameras, we're using a little
phone in my pocket. Was more from the perspective of understanding like that is how most people are using tools. Whether not necessarily
filmmakers, but just influencers, creators, people who want to use social media to build their
personal brand. So using that and understanding
that from a perspective, that's how a lot of people
are going to use it. So not so much only filmmakers. So that's kind of my approach to understanding that stuff. And especially in the sense that nowadays with Instagram reels and Tiktok and all of these ways that we use social media, a lot of people are using the more basic tools
to do those things. And I think understanding
that even if you are a high level filmmaker,
is important. And I think it can
be easy to shun it because it's less fancy,
you know what I mean? But at the same time, it's
really important because that's how most people are using their equipment and using social media 100%
I agree with you. It took me some time for my filmmaker ego to
kind of let go of like even using iphone stuff
and now I'm actually kind of incorporating it into more
higher produced projects. In a foi that's
fun, where all of a sudden there's a
vertical video inside a 16 by nine normal format project
that's high quality and then it cuts away to
something that's just kind of more raw and feels fun. But the thing that I loved about what we're going to
dive into your project is that from the trained
eye and the untrained eye, I mean, it looked quality,
you know what I mean? So I really want to
kind of go, you know, frame by frame and
kind of how and why you did the things that you do that you did
for that project. Kind of going through, you're
going to do screen cap for that to kind of show people, you know, it's the
biggest thing is that, yeah, the equipment should
never be holding you back. So I love, you know, your approach to it
and kind of accepting this new wave of mobile
filmmaking genre. I don't even know what
to really call it. Yeah, yeah, it's actually interesting. One
more point on that. Like in the realm of
Instagram and Tiktok land, I noticed that
often the clips and little reels that go viral are often like
the most simple ones. Like somebody like, you know, walking around with an phone and doing the crazy like
du jitsu waves. And it's like that's
kind of dumb. But it looks cool. And it's like, maybe because
it's a novel, right? It's unexpected. It's
something that you wouldn't see even amongst
filmmakers. So kind of. I think that's interesting. It is interesting. And yeah, the last thing I'll say about that is coming from a more
Filmmaking back background. It's like pointing the camera at yourself and holding the
camera was just like. Or holding the
camera and talking. As a filmmaker, you were always pointing the
camera in front of you, quietly, standing behind
the camera as a creative. And now it's just so funny, it's all kind of mixed together. But yeah, man, I love the intro. Let's kind of hop
into your video. Maybe we can play it all the way through so that students can see it and then we'll go and
you'll kind of dissect it. Great. I actually have
it in two layers too, so you actually, I stuck a go pro on my head so you can
actually see the behind. And that will give you some
context. I'm going to pull it up right now and
I will just play it. All right, so first
off, the first thing that came to mind when I thought about
creating this video I'm a teacher, I have a
course like yourself. So I really wanted to show the process of creation
instead of the end product. So that's why I put
together this piece. Also, my students, creators, not so much
filmmakers, you know, they're in the
realm of Youtuber. I hate the word influencers, but people who have, you
know, a personal brand. And so that was the process that specifically
for this video, I live in Southern California. I wanted to create something that was a destination
based video. This is a coffee shop
right in Venice. And everybody knows
the Venice skate Park. Everybody knows the boardwalk. It's very nostalgic. That's
why I chose this location. And then I just wanted to tell a story after all, like any video, whether it's an iphone or DSLR or story is the
base of everything. My mindset was like, I'm
going to just put together a little sequence that tells a story. Something very simple. Going out and getting
coffee and going in, like watching the skaters
at the Venice Gate Park. That was my mindset. This is a pretty simple sequence where it's just
very linear, right? There's nothing dynamic. It's just like
establishing shot. Which is why I chose
this shot because it's like showing the
coffee location, then cutting into more
establishing shots and then it really opens
up to the subject, really is my girlfriend, Amy, right here just going
through different shots. That's like not showing
the full environment. And then I chose to open
up halfway through to see, okay, that's the
Venice Boardwalk. You can't really tell
in the beginning, then you could clearly
see where it is. And then just ending with
the scene at the skate park. So how much of this was
blocked shot listed, storyboarded and how much was
just kind of okay, concept. I want to do like you
mentioned, destination, cool vibe, very modern
kind of hip, you know? The coffee thing
is very like big. Was it okay, I know where I want to shoot, I'm
just gonna do it. Or was it like shot list? Here's shot one, shot
two, shot three. Good question. I would say like 90% of the time in
any project I do, whether it is just a fun Sunday morning or
actually like a paid gig, I'm very analytical and
structured, Ironic. Like my girlfriend, I work with her and she like
makes fun of me. It to the degree
that I need to know every single angle
and, and movement. In this case, I actually
just was more free flowing. I knew like I wanted to put
together certain shots. Like I knew I wanted to
get establishing shots. The coffee shop, I knew I wanted to get
a shot of the sign, but I did not shot
list it out in order. But I did just go and shoot like two or
three shots of the sign. And then I shot a few
shots of the window. Then I got different angles
and movements of the brista. Creating the latte
was very like. Even though there
was not an awareness around exactly the shot, I knew I was going to get
certain shots and I was going to basically give myself
as much room and an edit. So I would get so
I wouldn't like, you know, imagine you go
through this process. If you go out and you
shoot and there's something that's just one
thing that's missing your God, I wish I had, you know, some type of panning
movement to put here. If I don't have a shot
list put together, I generally go out and do like four or five different
versions of the same thing. Like same shots of the sign
with different movements. Whether it's like pushing in, same shots of the coffee barista or different shots of barista
doing that same action. That's generally how I go into any shoot because
it just gives you more freedom if you were to
need to. You see it here? I mean, this is pretty typical
content creator practice. But using movement to match
shots like I would come in and even though I didn't
use that drop movement, I had that there in
case I needed to. So I just cut that out. But I did use it in the
second shot where I pull down and then match it
with the shot at the cups. So that's kind of something I would go into and just like, make sure that I
have the movement that I need if I need them. And then if not, then I have
other shots to pull from. And this is where I
don't want to have the same transition
for every single shot. But I do want to
have some movement, something that is
capturing somebody's eye. And also it's unique because
this is an iphone, right? Most people who are shooting
on the iphone aren't using more sophisticated camera
movement transitions there. Probably just just holding
it like this, right? I wanted to think, how
could I use something that is a little bit more
in the filmmaking tool kit, so to speak, in an experience
that's less sophisticated. That's why I chose the
movements in the beginning. Obviously, going
through this whole thing is cutting to a beat. It just keeps the sequence
flowing like organically. Using a mask, once again, not something that
you would see with somebody shooting on an iphone. A little more sophisticated and obviously just like leading people through the experience of like starting from the
boardwalk and getting to the skate park.
That's pretty much it. All of it's just simple
cuts and then just ending with the shot and just kind of like the kind of the culmination of chicks getting coffee, going for a walk, watching
all the Skater Bros. Mm hm. And so what you're
saying is basically when you see the shot in mind
or you already have it planned and written down,
you're shooting it. Yeah. 345 times to get what is it that
you're getting like, I know it's like that
feeling, you get the shot. You're like, okay, cool. I got it. But for
you, what is that? When do you know that that's
going to go in the edit? In a process like
this where it's not as structured and exact, I just look for, is the composition
good? Is it in focus? Is my hand shaky? You know, like you're using hand movement. I was using obviously
just my iphone. I didn't have to
stabilize or anything. I just want to make sure
I have at least two. Like clean takes something. I know I could use
that. It's not shaky. Things are in focus.
There's not somebody in the background that I
don't want to be there. I'll kind of just analyze
all those kind of check marks and if it passes then I'll give it a green light. Yeah, You're shooting all this stuff and then you're using like 10% 20% of the shots. And the rest is kind
of throwaway stuff. On the technical side, were
you using like Pro camera or Film Pro or were
you actually using the native video
recorder on the phone? Yeah, I believe
actually for this you can see it on there
on the phone screen, the moment app, particularly
because it allows you to very quickly change
the frame rate. Obviously, I shot this all in 60 frames, so I
can slow it down. It allows you to
control the aperture, shutter speed, and all of the functions that you
couldn't necessarily do. I don't believe you can in the native camera
roll camera in IOS. That's a really great app and
obviously it shows you like the exposure and balance and all the extra stuff that
you wouldn't have also.
36. Case Study: Creating Videos That Are Shareable and Unique: So what did you learn
shooting this on a smartphone versus using one of your more
professional level cameras? You have to be aware
of the composition. I think more than if you
have a DSLR, obviously, because an iphone has a
really high quality camera. But the depth of field
you just don't have. Right. Being aware of the
shots that you're able to use. It's almost like
here's a good example. Like if you use a prime
lens on a camera, it forces you to move
your body right? It's kind of like, that's kind
of one of the oldest thing people say is like
if you want to get better photography
or videography, like use a prime one
so you don't zoom in, right, I feel like it's kind
of that to a higher level. It's like it forces you to focus on things that
you could get away with a higher level
piece of equipment like composition hand
movement, right? Like I'm using a
very light iphone, so any little motion in my
hand is going to catch. Being really hyper
aware of how to do hand held camera movements is a really good thing to learn
when you're using an iphone. And I would say
those two things, just being able to understand
composition a little bit better forces you to kind
of only use what you have. And then secondarily is
like if you're going to use hand movement or
handheld movements, then it's a great way to
kind of test your skills. Right. And so with this, did you know you
wanted to do it sound driven with a montage or did you entertain the idea of doing maybe fully montage driven by the live sound in the video? Good question. Now I had the song in mind for
this specific clip. So that was kind of,
that was actually the foundation of this video and what kind of
sparked thought, because it kind of
had this like kind of chill morning
vibes energy to it. So it kind of was the
foundation of why I chose the sequence,
this story. And that's what kind
of built off of that. Mm hmm. Perfect. And so
have you been able to kind of use this project
in any way outside? Has it brought in any kind of other gigs or
anything like that? Any kind of, you
know, other things. Yeah. As a filmmaker
u, it's definitely, it's not necessarily
directly brought in a gig sound like somebody
like saw it and was like, hey, I need an phone video
made from my company, right? I would say indirectly, 100%
in the sense that for one, like I said, from an
engagement perspective, not that likes and views
matter, but they do. When it comes to social
media development, this specific video got the most shares and
it also was shared on platforms that host videography and
filmmaking content. Like learned Filmmaking. Filmmaker, like all of
those theme accounts on social media like Instagram, to my mind, I was like, oh, this is a sharable
piece of content. Creating these types
of content isn't necessarily a full depth, personally driven creative
expression type of project. But it's a project to get my account found as
a project to teach. Like I said, I had a course this shows people like,
oh, I'm a teacher, I'm not just creating
photos for myself, which nothing wrong with
that at all. That's great. It's established
me as a teacher. Like I said, a lot
of my students, we specifically focused on
creating Youtube channels. And a lot of them are intimidated by the
filmmaking process. This shows them like, oh, you don't need to
have a $3,000 USR. You can start with what's
in your pocket if you're willing to take the time to
learn how to use the tool. And that's really
what's come from this. What do you think it is? You're saying that
this was one of your better more
engagement, more shares, more audience interaction with your probably lowest
expensive piece of equipment. Which is kind of
a weird contrast. Or it seems like it opposes,
you know what I'm saying? So what is that sauce? What is that thing that
other people can really hear and apply into equipment? Yes, it's important. But what
is it about this video that created that engagement that other people are wanting
in their videos? I can get met with
that. A few thoughts. One, it's different. It
immediately is different. Most people don't
see people making cinematic B roll sequences with an iphone
immediately right there. Two, it's a format that I recognized as something
that's getting attention. I follow a lot of filmmaking
accounts and I was like, oh, this format of
showing what you create, whether it's like
the timeline on the bottom and the B
roll sequence on the top or the actual film POV style, I recognized, oh, these pieces of content are getting shared. These pieces of content are
getting a lot of engagement. And I said, oh, I'm going
to go start creating this. And I think the key to that
is just being observance. And that always develops
and change, right? People use social media differently and it always
is evolving and changing based on like Instagram
reels just came out like it's basically obviously
like mimicking Tiktok. I thought that was
very interesting. That's a side tangent. But like people use Instagram
in a very specific way, people use Tiktok in
a very specific way. People use Youtube in
a very specific way. But now that people
got used to how to use Tiktok and all of a sudden
Instagram reels came out. Now I'll see the Tiktok
dances on Instagram reels. It has become like a
meme of its own, right. And I think that's because
it's how people are used to using a platform and for the filmmaking
photography community, show people the process,
then show them. The result was very viral
on Tiktok and I was like, oh, that's going to start
carrying over to Instagram. So that was my mindset
around why I did this. And it's a vibe,
there's a feeling, it's storytelling
in the sense of you're showing
someone's experience and you're giving it in a way that is aesthetically pleasing. And what can you
kind of speak to? That is that it's obviously all these techniques apply
to any piece of equipment. But when it comes to
storytelling and, you know, using video to tell that story, what have you kind of learned over the years
with that process? Good question. It's just like a, there's a finesse
to a good video versus a great video
versus a holy crap video. Right? And it's all these little subtle
things that come together. I don't claim to be the
best technical filmmaker. I know there's so
many people who are amazing at both the shooting
and editing process, right? But it's like you can just
like bring or be willing to teach yourself all
those little elements and work on them and
they all come together. I think that's what
makes something stand out in my mind in this
specific project. In this video, it's handheld. Can you shoot handheld video? Well, do you know how to use your body and
not just your hands? Do you know what types of shots can you shoot
versus what you can? Right, there's certain
shots with the gimble. If I was like chasing her and
she was running, obviously, unless you're trying
to get like a shaky like action scene, but understanding how to do that is one thing, color
correction, right? So understanding how to color, correct, and grade a shot, once again, something
that's not typical for an iphone video. But if you can bring all of those little elements together, understanding how to edit a
sequence together that feels natural and not forced
or awkward cuts, I think all of those
elements coming together like a little
bit of editing technique, shooting technique, understanding
how to color grade, understanding how to cut
a sequence to a beat, and not just like
randomly putting shots together to some song
that doesn't really fit. I think those are all the elements that
really come together. I imagine like something
that's once again, I'm a structured person, so
you can break that down and kind of like put that
onto a spreadsheet. And it's something that is just unspoken and kind of like
you have to have a finesse, an awareness that's unspoken. And I think being able to have both of those elements is really what brings
that together. All right, so what's the thing if you were to do this project, now that you've done this one, and let's say you want to do, I want to do another 32nd. What's the one thing that
you would upgrade or change to really make it
even one step better? It's a good question.
I would bring in some element of humor or pop culture relevancy is because that's really the things that people
connect with on the Internet, whether it's on Youtube, especially in this
short format, right? Is something that
people relate to. It can be expressed in
so many different ways. Whether it is like getting in a fight with your
girlfriend and creating a little sequence
of that obviously audio that brings something
in actual dialogue. That's immediately something I would probably bring in is like, how could I create like a little dialogue sequence that shows something
that's relatable, humorous, and connect
with people in that way? I think that's what I would
do because that's really, I think what people relate to, especially in short
format content like Instagram and Tiktok, which is obviously this is
meant for that platform. You see a lot of
people who are in the social media creator world
who do that type of stuff. And on the most low quality way, they're like color grading their footage and doing
B roll sequences. But they're doing something that connects with people
that's relatable. Whether it's like
some goofy sequence of a girlfriend and
a boyfriend ghosting each other while
they're texting, or something stupid like that. And it's kind of like, I think to a filmmaker
or creative like, oh, that's stupid, but that's
what people care about. So how can you blend those
two things together, the pop culture elements and the relatability element
with storytelling, filmmaking, and those
two things together. I think that's the
stuff that stands out. Exactly, yeah. How do you
express the community thought or the stuff
that so many people relate to express
that in a video. That's something that
I'm really working on changing, you know? Yeah. The type of content
that I create for social media platforms because what I think is good
is like high produced, the majority of people is like entertainment humor,
something that. Oh, yeah, I know
that. I get that. So that's something that, Yeah, I'm working on that
balance as well. So to kind of sum it up
and wrap it up here, what's kind of something you want to leave the students with, these cinematographers,
upcoming video creators. You know what's a
little piece of advice, you know that
you've learned over the years, you want
to leave them with. I would say this, I
think it's easy to, especially as a filmmaker
and a creative, to focus on what other people do and be overwhelmed by that. I think it's hard to
sometimes when you get in your own head
of like creating your own style and the way
that you create content. I think though it's a balance of observing and learning from others while still at the same time creating your own style. Don't be so focused
and headstrong about like I want to do it
the way that I want to do it. On the flip side, don't be
focused on like I'm going to do exactly what Sam colder, do it and
it's going to work. And I'm going to be
a travel influencer and I was that person too. I literally turned down jobs, so I could go fly to Bali, and I'm going to go
film waterfalls. And that was the most amazing
experience I've ever had. But that doesn't necessarily
mean that you're going to create the same
result from that. My point in saying that is
that focus on your style, focus what is authentic to you and observe what people do. Because really the blend
of the two is really, I think, how you're going
to create success in that. I'm very much like, coming from a background of
digital marketing, I think more from a strategist, more so than the creative. But if you can bring both
those elements together, both the creative mindset and the strategic
observant mindset, I think that's really
what will stand out and allow you to one, not only be
creatively fulfilled, but also understand like what type of content
are people hiring for where if I'm looking to become
a full time filmmaker and be paid for this
career and skill, what types of jobs and
things are people going to hire me for versus just the
creative side of things? And I think both of
those things need to be understood and brought
together. Mm hmm. Yeah, I love that, man.
It's all about remixing. And talk a lot about that. Taking yourself, you other
people's ideas and yeah, remixing and building
something new, but building on top of what's worked before you know so Well, perfect man, thank you
for coming on today and expounding on all the stuff that you learned on
making this project. And of course going to link to all your sites so
that all the students can check out your work. And looking forward to seeing
the next iphone project, the next smartphone video. Glad chat and thanks and.
37. Main Types of Microphones: Here we are key fundamentals and principles of getting
good sound recording. I know I've talked about sound already while you've
been shadowing me on some of these shoots that I've been
doing for you guys. But this is just an extra
in depth dive into Yeah, the mechanics that make good sound quality
when you're shooting. So let's get into it. Some of the basics
that I just want to cover with you is
you always want to capture the best sound
quality. Why is that? Because people generally
won't click away from an overexposed or grainy
image like I mentioned. But they'll click away
from audio that is echoy, buzzy, or distorted. So here are some main
key recording types and ways for you to
get clean audio. First, I want to talk about the three main types of cameras, cameras that the first
three main types of audio recorders or
ways to record audio. We have our lavalier, Mike, we have shock and Mike, and we have a zoom or
a handheld recorder. And I'm just going
to briefly explain, man, I cannot talk today. Briefly explain the benefits, the downsides, and the positives of each type of these recorders. The lavalier captures
sound in a small sphere, which is called an
omnidirectional mic. It gets in all omni directions
around the microphone. This is perfect for
interviews, Youtube, or when the microphone needs to be hidden or out of sight. I'm doing this course
with a lavaler mic because I want it to
match the audio that I get. When I'm doing the
learning exercises and walking around the house
and shooting, and moving. I don't have a
boom operator that can follow me around
with a boom mic. So it's really best
for my scenario. It's portable. It's wireless. I highly recommend it for pretty much all
shooting scenarios. You're not going to get
that wider deeper podcast, the sounding voice
recorder from a lavalier mic because the microphone
itself is on the tinier side. Those big, wider
microphones that you see for podcasts or
even shotgun mics, they have more
ability to pick up more information
vibration because the recording device
itself is bigger. So that is one downside
of the lavalier mic. You're giving up a
certain level of audio width and quality
for the portability, convenience and just
overall ease of using it. Now the shock un mice captures what's directly in
front of the mic. Okay, it's used for capturing subjects at a distance
which is perfect. Or it can be used on board
a camera or connected to a boom pole or a
tripod type of setup. That you can have just
out of frame right about there capturing my audio. You always want your shock
un mic to be pointing at the base of the source of the audio that
you're trying to get. You don't want it
pointing here, you know? You want it to be
pointing right where the source of the voice or
sound is resonating from. So that's a small little tip. And that really goes for
all mics too, I must say, is that you want to
get the distance of the microphone to
the audio source as minimal as possible. I'll show in the
shadowing demonstration, in the next lecture, that you'll see what
kind of effects the distance of the microphone
to the subject has on the overall recording quality
and, um, sound dynamics. But that's a good tip for any microphone
that you're using. And just to reiterate, I don't
know if I touched on it, but for the shotgun mic, it's perfect for when you
are at a distance of. So let's say you're shooting
a soccer game and you want to get audio of
kicking the ball of the ball going to the goal
of the audience cheering. You can't go around and put a lavalier mic on each
one of these people, but what you can do is use a shock gun mice to
shoot directionally the audio that you want to get picked up or received
into your recording. The shockgun mic is
perfect for those kind of scenarios where you can't always get up close
and personal, but you want to pick up what's happening in
front of the camera. Audio wise, it's perfect. Now if you're getting
interview stuff, you don't want to
be shooting with a shock gun mic across the room. The shock gun mice is great
for ambient noises like cars, Like I mentioned, soccer
game noises at a distance. Any other kind of noise
that you want to pick up that creates an atmosphere
for your video, But you don't want to be sitting
across the room shooting interview audio with the
microphone on the Ashokan mic. You know, multiple feet or
yards away from the subject. That's going to have an echoe, nondesirable thing feeling
for interview type scenarios. So I just want you guys to make that distinction between
picking up audio and a surrounding with a
directional mic shockunmiic and then also interview. It's two separate scenarios
where the distance of the microphone to the
subject doesn't matter so much for ambient
atmospheric noises. But when it's talking like this, you don't want it to
be across the room. So let's move on. The
handheld recorder, most commonly, Zoom is the
largest of these companies. This is a recorder that allows mics to be
plugged into it, so you can do in field mixing. That means you have
multiple microphones that are getting
plugged in and you can level those audios on your
chute at your production. And it can also pick up stereo from the microphone
that's built in. Generally all zooms
have that and it and they're also
generally have CelR inputs so you can do
more live event or music productions with multiple microphones
and multiple channels. I don't think that you guys will be using these very often. Maybe if you have some type
of podcast or video podcast, or you do a lot of interviews
with multiple subjects, using the zoom will be handy. But I just kind of
wanted to cover the main three so that
we're all speaking the same language and we all have a general
understanding of when to use what
and what scenario and what the pros and cons are. Okay, so in the next lecture I'm actually going to be
shadowing you guys are. Well, you guys are going
to be shadowing me. And I'm going to be
showing you dynamics of sound in a scenario
and how that's affecting your overall
sound quality. I'll see you guys there.
38. Sound Dynamics In Your Environment: I always want to say, okay. So. But I notice I
always say, okay, what else can I say besides and then I'm like all all right. So I'm like damn, I don't
know how to not do it. Okay. So okay. So I'm just going to
do it. So here we are. We are at the same
filming location of the majority of almost all of the talking portion
of this course. I'm using the same
exact microphone in almost the same exact position I generally film from
about right here. This is the backdrop. But I'm sure as you've been
listening and going through the learning
lessons in this course, even though I'm in
the same scenario, it sounds quite a bit different. So what we're going
to talk about in this learning lesson
is sound dynamics. Choosing a location to
film that in your space that you want to film that
has the best sound possible. And how to actually
change the scenario to upgrade your sound if the
situation isn't that ideal. Now the reason why,
even though I'm standing in this normal place that I've been filming
for this course, but it sounds so different
is because I normally have two big sound dampen
eras that I put up a big wall of curtains or
blankets or anything soft, it takes out the
reflectivity of the room. And so that's where we're
going to kind of go over in this lesson. So I kind of want to start by walking around the
house so that you can actually hear the difference of what different scenarios
actually sound like. So we're standing in
the middle of the room, so we're getting kind of equal
echo from all directions. Now if we see we have a carpet. This is really picking up a
lot of the sound reflection. What we want to get rid
of is the reverb stuff. The reverb is what makes
things not sound good. So if I have my microphone
and it's really close to me, and there's not going to
be that much reverb if I'm talking directly
into the microphone. Now, if I hold the microphone out here and I'm still talking, you see that it's not
getting nearly as good of sound quality because
there's a lot of extra reverb that it's
picking up as well. So the very first thing
that you want to do is have your microphone as close as
possible to your subject. Forgive me for any of the noises that this is creating in your
ears as a student, but it's for the learning, okay? So we want to always have the microphone as
close as possible, whether that's a shock and mic, a zoom mic, a lavalier mic, or even your iphone, like I mentioned in
the other courses, that audio hack that I
showed with the phone, That's the first thing
that I want to talk about. Now let's talk
about reflectivity. So if I come over here, if I'm talking
directly towards this, it's gonna pick up some echo. If I have the same distance, but I'm talking at a wall, you can hear a huge difference
in the sound dynamics. So when you're
looking at a room, you're looking for
good lighting, you're looking for
a good background, you're looking for good
dynamics for your sound. Now if I walk into this room and the room is
about half of the size, you're going to be able to hear the difference in echo
as I'm walking in here, so it's a lot fuller. I can hear myself a lot more. Which on the microphone is going to pick up a lot
more of that echo. So the way we would solve this is by putting up
a sound dampener, by adding rugs, by covering any reflective
surface that we can. This is helping. These
are certainly helping. But stuff like this, no,
this is not helping. So we're going to take a look
at adding a sound dampener, But I just want to walk through the house so you
guys will be able to kind of think ahead as you're
setting up your scenes. So let's now take
a look and go into a room that has absolutely
no sound dampening. And I want you to
hear the difference as I'm walking through here. So as I'm walking in here, this room is about the same size as the dining room
that we were just in. But I feel like I'm in
an echo chamber in here. So same size like I mentioned, Smaller creates more reverb, but more importantly,
reflectivity. If I put a carpet in here, if I put some soft
things on the walls, couches are great,
pillows are really great. You want stuff that's
not going to bounce the audio waves around
in your environment. So you can see this is like E, this is not usable. I can't film in
here until I set it up with proper sound dynamics. Now the next thing that we're going to do
is we're going to set a kind of a
homemade thing that you will be able to do at home
using just a blanket or a rug that you hang that's going to cut out
all of this noise. So remember what
this sounds like, and then I'm going to
go grab the blanket and we're going to set it
up and hear the difference.
39. How to DIY For Better Sound Instantly: As you can see, I just
took about a minute to set up this backdrop stand. We have two of these tripods with a vertical
or horizontal crossbar. And with just a simple blanket, you can use really
any blanket for this. But the thicker and the
more dense, the better. What this is doing is it's capturing the sound
that's bouncing around. And it's blocking
it from obviously reflecting and making that crazy echo chamber like before. When we heard it, it
sounded like this. Remember what this sounds like? And then I'm going to
go grab the blanket and we're going to set it
up and hear the difference. So it's a lot better
if I had my set up, let's say I really
wanted to film in here. This has pretty
decent natural light. We haven't cut off or blocked
any of the light because this is more about
the audio dynamics. But if I were to choose
to film in here, but the audio wasn't good. Firstly, I would set
up something like this to really pick up and
dampen a lot of that sound. And I would speak at it. So the closer I'm going to
get to this, the closer, so the closer I'm
going to get to this, why you kick in my backdrop. So the closer that
I get to this, the more that it's going to
pick up any excess sound. So your voice is like a
cone that's shooting out. The more I move
away, the more it's starting to hit the rest
of these surfaces. Right. So you want to keep that in mind is whatever you do
have in your scenario, that's dampening
sound, They're sorry, there's cars honking
outside. It's ridiculous. What we're going to
talk about next is how to get those noises away. So, like I mentioned, huge difference right before
and after is night and day. And I haven't even
put a rug in here, I haven't put any couches in here, I haven't
put in anything. It's simply using what I'll call a backdrop stand to really fix the audio
problems that you may encounter when you're filming
at home or for a client. And you need something that's easy whether you're
shooting at home, But I really want
to show you this is a great alternative to not having to have
anything super expensive. All you need is two tripods and a horizontal
crossbar like this, a blanket and two clamps, and you'll be able to change the dynamics of your
room very easily.
40. 3 Ways to Remove Noise Makers From Your Shoot: We understand really more about the dynamics of our sound. What I want to talk about now is what really can make our break. The quality of the sound that
we're getting right now, we're in our recording space. If we are quiet and we listen, we can pick up a few things that's happening in
the environment. After you've figured out
where you want to film, before you hit the
record button, you want to take a survey of things that are
causing excess noise, that are getting excess noise. I don't know that
was excess noise that are getting picked
up in your scene, just like what we just heard. So we're going to walk
through and find out what those potential problems are in most scenarios and we're
going to fix those problems. So by first or one of the first things mainly
is window noise, okay? Wind that's coming out of a window, coming
through a window. Cars honking in the
background like we just had filming
the other lecture. Plenty of cars because
we live here in Los Angeles and there's
just a lot of issues. Dogs barking the
distance, whatever. So whether it's
obvious or not to you, I definitely want to just
mention that closing all your windows before
you start recording. Very important. The next thing that we hear is
air conditioning. This is creating a steady
hum in the background. Feels good, feels really good, but it creates a steady
hum in the background. So before we record, AC, boom, the next thing, and this
is a much more low key, the window and the air
conditioning unit. Very much. You got to fix those. Otherwise when you're
editing there's going to be a constant
hum in the background. One of the reasons
people click away from videos is if it's
echoi distorted, buzzing, humming
in the background, you always want to
have clean audio. The last thing is the hum on the fridge now might sound funny, might
not, I don't know. But I, if we listen, you don't want this in
your recording. Okay. So I always shut
off the fridge and a little hack to that
because sometimes you forget to turn
the fridge back on. I set a timer on my phone
when I shut off the fridge, that in 2 hours the
timer will go off. You can't do anything
about the honking, but the 2 hours when
the timer goes off, it reminds me to turn the fridge back on because you don't
want to leave that off. I've done it many times, but man, these
people are honking. Like on the lecture that
I'm doing about sound, what is the jokes? So that should give you guys
a really good one oh one on how to take a normal area and make
it sound a lot better. How to use sound dynamics in a room that might be very echoy. Always keeping the
microphone as close to the subject as
possible and really killing the things that can distort or make distracting
noises in your recordings.
41. Auto vs. Manual Audio Settings: All right, cool. So now
that you guys have seen, it's pretty interesting
how different environments reflect sound in different ways. How the settings on the camera or whatever you're using to record how that changes
the sonics as well. And kind of, you know,
an overall view of shadowing me on how to
choose your locations. Now I want to actually record a voice over that
we're going to use later in this course for you guys so you can see how I would
actually go about doing that. So let's do it. I'm going to actually
grab this camera in the back and
we're going to get started. All right, perfect. So we have this
other camera here, and right now I'm
going to scroll over to the audio settings and Yeah, right now as you can
see, it's set to manual. Now if we go into that setting, we can see our record level. And when I'm speaking right now, it's hitting just
below negative 12. And negative 12 is
really the sweet spot where you want to be
getting the majority of your audio peaking at or
just above that region you never wanted to get to zero because that's when
it starts distorting. So for this shotgun,
specifically, in this scenario,
the manual setting is actually set pretty
a little bit low. So we're going to turn that up. What I do is just select it, scroll the wheel up, and now you can see where
it's pretty much peaking just about or right below the
negative 12, which is perfect. Now what I want to
show you guys is the difference in sound quality. If we take a, listen to me talking and then
when I stop talking, okay, you hear a little
bit of the room tone, a little bit of the atmosphere. But if I were to change
it to automatic, let's see what that sounds like. Now we're on auto and
so we can see what, you know, we can see what the recording situation and what the recording
quality sounds like. While I'm talking,
it sounds fine, but when I stop talking, the camera is doing its
best to boost the levels to what it thinks that I
want to record, right? So the auto is great for
different scenarios where you don't really have the capability
of changing settings. Let's say you're
at a concert and it's quiet and there's
people that you're interviewing and talking
to and then you're recording the live audio of the concert coming
through the speakers. That's going to be
a big fluctuation. That situation you may want to do auto unless
you're going to be, you know, changing
your settings. But it's just good to know that when you have a sit
down interview, or you're sitting down and
recording your own video, you want to set that
audio recording, setting two manuals
so that you can get the crisp audio
that's hitting at the right amount of
input for your voice. And then when you stop speaking, it's not trying to fluctuate
the amount of input to maintain that amount of
sound that's coming in.
42. My DIY Set Up: And you know what, actually,
I want to show you guys maybe a little
bit of close ups for the kind of sound
light situation set up that I have right here, just in case you
have any questions. So this light is simply
a 36 inch diffuser. Okay. I think I got that at Sammy's camera for
like 30 bucks. So this is a really
great purchase to add soft lighting and also work. Secondly, as a great sound
dampener Now now this is simply just a C stand that has a 90 degree
articulating arm. Okay. And I just took a sheet and put that over the arm with two
clamps at the top. Super easy, super
simple way to get a very large change in the quality of your
sound and you can go more intense into the amount of sound dampening
that you do or less. It's really a
personal preference, up to you of how solid you want your audio
to be coming through, but this is an easy
way that takes maybe ten to 15
minutes to set up. And if you're one of those
people that shooting with a permanent set up at your
house or wherever you shoot, doing an option like
this is an excellent, excellent way to make all of your future videos
sound much better. In the next lecture, I'm
going to be diving into me, actually recording
my own voice over. And you guys will
my own voice over. And you guys will be able to see what that looks and
what that sounds like. So let's check it out.
43. Case Study: Create a Great Voiceover with a Lavalier Mic vs. Shotgun Mic: Now we're going to be
recording my voice over. It's going to be
a roll coverage, a role audio for something
that we're going to be adding two together
later in chorus. Man, I'm just doing some
crazy things today. I'm going to kind of move
my set up a little bit. I don't want the laptop
in the shot for this. And move this out of the way. Okay, cool. Now we're
clean, got nothing on here. So I created this script with the pre production
checklist that's actually from the
course before this. It's a small example. I want you guys to not
get too intertwined with this creative idea, but it's just something
that's funny to me. I really love coffee.
Kind of addicted to it. Sometimes it feels like am I drinking the coffee or is
the coffee drinking me? Because I feel like sometimes, like the craving
is so damn real. But anyways, this voice over and this script and concept came from the previous
course to this one. And the whole checklist, the pre production checklist
that helped me come up with the idea and everything is an actual handout
for that chorus. So if you're interested in that, it is in the bonus lecture, which is the final
lecture of this course. You guys can check out that
one to help you come up with your concepts and
really hone in on Yeah. Videos that you want
to create using that course and that handout. So let's get to the voiceover. So yeah, you know, this
realization hit me earlier today. It's kind of, it's hard to say. Mm, yeah. It's hard,
it's hard to say. But I am addicted to coffee. I just love the entire
experience of it. Those lovely textured beans with the aroma that fills
the entire room. And then brewing it when
you pour that piping hot water over those
freshly ground beans, and then the gift of actually
being able to drink it right with all that
productive energy that goes through the body. You know what? And
then sometimes I feel like maybe I don't need this. Maybe this is something
that I should stop indulging in. I mean, really? Do I need to be drinking
this stuff like every day? Yeah. You know what, I
think I'm gonna stop today. Yeah, on second thought, I think I'm going to
get a second cup. So hopefully that was
slightly entertaining for you and moderately funny. But I want to also show you guys what that would sound like because for this kind of video, I'm planning on using the visuals of me for the
beginning and for the end. So I shot an angle
like this with me looking at the camera
for the voice over. But if it's something
like audio for an intro video where you know you are not
going to be using, you actually talking
to the camera. In that situation where
the video doesn't matter. You can actually use a
shock and mic that you have or an actual recording microphone for
podcasts that you use, or whatever a bigger microphone
would be that's bigger and can get more width and
depth than a lavalier mic. So I'm going to show
you what that would look like and really what
that would sound like, the difference between
the two recordings. Now we have this on and to
really get that kind of like deeper podcast voice that's really open and sounds
like radio show. You want to get a nice
shock at mic or boom mic or zoom really close to your mouth for this
kind of situation. And so if we weren't going
to be using my visuals, what it would look like, and of course I wouldn't be
doing it handheld. I would set it up on a tripod. Tripods are being used
for this video shoot, so I'm just going
to do it by hand. But of course you'd have it on a tripod and you would get
as close to the microphone. So let's switch over from the lavalier to
the shock at mic. And here you can really
hear the difference of probably a lot more
width that's getting picked up while I speak. And if I was to move this away, you would start to hear
a difference compared to when I move this
closer to the mouth. You can really feel more
of a resonance and it sounds a lot more like a
professional voice over. So now I'm going to read
just a few lines from the script that I just
did for the coffee video. I just love the
entire experience of it from start to finish, the texture of those sweet beans and earthy aroma
that fills the room. I just love the entire
experience of it. Those lovely textured beans with the aroma that fills
the entire room. Maybe this is something I
should stop indulging in. I mean, really? Do I need to drink this stuff like every
day? I mean, really? Do I need to be drinking
this stuff like every day? Yeah. You know what, I
think I'm gonna stop today on second thought. I'm going to get a second cup. So as you can see, you don't want to be
holding this by hand. That's not advisable because anytime you're touching
it or moving it, you're going to be picking up on those sounds that will
be getting picked up into your audio recording. But I wanted to show you guys what the different qualities of sound happen when you are recording with different
types of microphones. This is like a like $150 mic compared to this $600
Sen, iser lavalier. But the quality in
depth really comes from the size of
the recorder that's receiving those different
bands of frequency, the different range
of frequency. So I hope that gives
you guys some insights on the audio recording
process and how you can really use it to upgrade the quality and sound
of your videos.
44. Smartphone Audio Hack: Okay, so now that you have
a pretty good understanding of using slightly more
professional audio, I also wanted to talk about
using your smartphone. So I'm going to do
screen recording here. I've actually found that
the audio directly from the microphone on iphones
and smartphones in general can be pretty damn good if you
know how to use it. One option for you is to attach a lavalier mic directly
into your smartphone. You're going to have to
get various adapters. I will link the products that I recommend in the next lecture so that you guys
can see what I use. If I do have to record audio using a lavalier mic
through my smartphone. Road is an excellent company that makes it very
easy to do this. Of course, you'll need the
little lightning bolt, thunderbolt, lightning
bolt adapter, whatever it is. But
this is a great option. So I'm going to hit record
and you guys will be able to see what
that sounds like directly into my phone
versus what it sounds like using just the audio from
the phone speaker itself. This is what it sounds
like just using the audio from the
mice in the phone. But I want to show
you a little bit of a hack that I found here doing voice recordings on the road and not really having
time or not really having the right equipment
while I've been traveling. What you can do is actually
bring the microphone from your phone
close to your mouth. But you don't want to have the
mic directly pointed here, because this is going to
really pick up in the mic. The little hack that I've
found is turning the phone sideways and talking into
it directly this way, really close to the mouth. You can actually get good sounding audio if you guys are recording
a voice over for a video that you're doing or a trailer for your
Youtube channel. Whatever it is, smartphone can really get you really decent, really good sounding audio. So I just wanted to add this little tip here
that you can either use lavalier going directly into the camera if that's not something that's
available to you. There are very decent
lavalier mics that go directly into the
smartphone and there's even the shotgun ones that
I don't personally have, but I will link because
I've had friends use it and it works really well for
more of the logging style. I'll link that in
the next lecture. But trust me, if you
use the built in, but hold it sideways
to the mouth so that the air is not hitting
the speaker directly, but the sound is still getting
picked up very cleanly. You will be surprised. I've used it for
a few projects in a pinch to record
my own voice over. So I hope that little smartphone
hack helps you guys out. And I will see you
in the next lecture.
45. Learning Exercise: Record Your Crystal Clear Audio: So that's pretty crazy. Sound dynamics is huge. I would much rather
record my audio on a decent microphone in a set
up with good sound dynamics. Then a super expensive
microphone in an echoy room with
loud, distracting, buzzing noises or anything, that's going to really degrade the overall clarity
of your sound. So now what we're going to
do is work on recording your new and improved audio with the techniques
that we've learned. So we're going to
be synthesizing these techniques
and you're going to be able to apply
these enhancements to your own recording. So I want you to record your voice using
this new knowledge. And this can be used
as the voiceover for the B roll montage we're gonna
shoot later in the course. I mentioned that a few times. If you haven't gotten your
voice over yet, don't worry. But it is important because
we're going to keep building these techniques on top of each other so that by the
end of the course, you're going to have
everything that we brought together
all in one video. That's really the goal,
one video that you walk away with with
all these techniques that are highly produced
with a better final product. So while you're doing
your voice over, getting your more
enhanced audio, you can record video of
that if you like as well, or you can just record audio
of it totally up to you. So your assignment is to
apply these techniques. We've learned to get crystal
clear sounding vocals. The first example
that you're going to record is your vocals in a normal environment without any changes or without any use of the techniques
we've gone over. In the second example, you're going to hit the
Record button and record your vocals with the
new techniques used. These techniques are proper mic settings, proper placement, choosing the right
type of environment, canceling out any kind of
background noise makers, and setting up your surroundings with good sound dynamics, using a DIY set up, or using any type of belongings or
equipment that you have, that's going to set up a
great sounding environment. Then you want to
export and share your audio link with
the combined before and after to the Q
and A section so that you and your other students can learn from each
other's mistakes. Learn from what each other
are doing, right, And so on. So with that said, go ahead and upload your
before and afters, and I will see you in the
next learning lesson.
46. Review and Improve Your Footage: Yes, yes, yes. So we got
a chance to see me in different kind of
audio scenarios and how to get the best
audio for your video. Now what we're going to
do is take a look at the footage that
we've shot so far. So ideally up until this point, you've basically shot some
sort of talking scene. Whether or not that is
you walking and talking, talking to the laptop, talking with selfie video, talking to a DSLR or
mirrorless camera. There's some type of dialogue or voiceover or something
of some kind that we can basically create a shot list for and block out or yeah, basically create a list of cutaway shots to add on
top of that footage. So what we're going to
be talking about is reviewing and improving
your footage. As you can see here, I have all my before and after shots. You can see the improvements in the stylizing, in the coloring, in the lighting, in the
depth in the settings, all of these
different attributes that we've talked about so far. Now, this is where
a lot of people can call their videos done, right? But we're going to take
it a step further and introduce what's called
B roll or cutaway shots. Simply put, it's just an
extra layer of footage on top of what you've
already shot that further explains what's going
on in your video, so let's dive into that further.
47. Understanding B-Roll and B-Roll Coverage: So let's talk about
understanding B role and its purpose now. Basically, there's two keys to filming or creating a
better looking video. What we're doing is
we're shooting what the viewer will experience
in their minds. That's, we're going to get a little bit on the
theory side here, but I want to keep it very
straightforward for you guys. But basically is this, is that the type of footage
or the type of video that you watch is always made up of two different types of coverage. And that's a roll coverage which is the main footage
of your video. This is a role coverage. Right now, it's me talking. It's your main layer of footage. I said that twice
or three times. It's your main layer of
video in your video, right? That's called A role. Now, B role is basically
the cutaway shots or what is added on to that layer of video
to further explain. So I've mentioned that before. And basically it's primary
and secondary footage. And the reason I say that, it's what the viewer will
experience in their mind. If I'm talking to you right now and you're
watching this video, this is all you're experiencing. Now, if I took it a
step further and added cutaway shots or you started to see different layers of
footage in this video, it would take you on a
different journey and a different experience
in your mind which would then create a better looking and feeling more produced video. So that's really
the primary thing that we're talking about here. So let's dive a little bit
more into a role coverage now. This is the main
footage of your video or scene for an interview. It's the subject speaking, just like I mentioned
for a story. It's the main characters
interaction between. It's the main interactions
between characters. Okay, so if it's for
your Tiktok video, your role footage
is of you dancing, doing some kind of sync to
music video vibe, right? But if you added
cutaway shots to that, then there would be a
little bit more depth. So that's the role, the cutaway shots to
the role overall, it's the main driving
force of the entire video. And lastly, a role is
generally shot first. So for this course, for example, I'm shooting all my
main role footage. And then I have a shot
list of basically what needs to be
layered on top of that. And then I go, boom,
knock out the shot list. And then I have
everything that I need to work with in post production. Now B roll coverage is the
cutaway shots, the inserts, the close ups of when
someone is speaking or picking up the phone or
something important happens, that's what you're adding
on on top of your footage. It can be an object of
importance like a phone, like I mentioned, that
you shoot a close up after filming the main scene. It's the shots overlaid on top of your interview
or your footage. Just like this cutaway
shot of the screen, right? The text that you're
seeing on screen is technically B roll
footage that's overlaid on top of the role footage to further explain and
get across to you, the viewer, the video that's happening in your mind
to further get across the point of what I'm
trying to teach or make a funny situation or tell a story or whatever
your type of video is. This is the overall concept, so you're showing the audience the important things
to take note of. So it's kind of like an
establishing shot of a character that's in a
specific location, right? It's a big part of making a higher produced video is really by using these
cool cutaway shots. So here's an example of what
this coverage looks like. You have to create style. Style, something that you see, Style, something that you bring, that's more than
anything physical. I've been through so
much in my lifetime. The biggest thing was
me tearing my ECO, you know, and I just try
to do like in and out. It kind of just popped
the first time, then I try to go
in the second time and that's when I knew I toured. I feel like if you get down
and you worry and you know, like that means you don't have the belief that you say you do. So this leads us to
different shot types. So in the next lecture, I'm gonna dive into what these different type
of shot types are. And then we're going to go over a learning exercise where we're going to create
our own shot list. And then you guys are
going to shadow me and see the actual process of
having our roll coverage. Ideally, you've already shot
that during this course. And then I'm going
to walk you through the process, step by step, of how I would go about shooting this different
kind of B roll coverage, using different shot types. And using camera movement. And other cool little tricks
that you guys will be able to incorporate into all
your future videos. So let's get into it. I'll see you in
the next lecture.
48. Importance of Using Multiple Shot Types: Okay, so I get really excited about this part
because we are going to be talking about shot
types and camera movement, which is one of my
favorite favorite parts. So let's start with knowing
your different shot types. Now what I'm going to
show you is an example of a scene with one shot type, and we're going to see
what that looks like. Now we're going to look
at that same exact scene with multiple shot types. It's going to allow for us to have more depth in
that same scene, but also stretch time, have more footage to work with in post production
and to really create an actual experience
that extends beyond just a five second
clip. Let's check it out. It's pretty cool, right? So we're looking at close ups, wide shots, medium shots, a lot of slow motion. So like you mentioned before, this is a perfect
scenario to use slow motion capability on
the camera that you're shooting on to tell a story. What we're doing here is really using our different ability to tell a story through choosing
what ingredients to show to the audience. Just like a chef, a
little bit of salt, a little bit of
pepper, a little bit of cayenne, add some spice. This is really how we use different shot types and
really how we decide, you know, how to
effectively tell our story. And so what we're
going to do now is go over what the title of
these different shot types are and then I'll
briefly explain when to use which type of shot.
49. Shot Types: In Depth: So up first we have an extreme wide shot or a landscape shot. What this is doing is it's showing our subject
in an environment. So when we're planning out our video or when we're
not sure what to shoot, I'm going to kind of
run through the reasons and the purpose of these
different types of framing. For the extreme wide
of the landscape shop. We want to show our subject in their surrounding,
in this situation. If we're shooting a video, and we want the
audience to know that our subject is in a particular area that's of
some type of importance. The wide shot of the
landscape shot is a perfect shot to map out and put into your shot list that we're going to
work on together. But it's a good thing to
keep in mind that that shows the environment
that you're shooting in. So what you're showing
to the audience, you always have to keep in
mind that is of importance. So we're not just randomly
swinging the camera around or pouring our
phone in random places, but we're always
having the thought in the back of our mind that we're
showing what's important. We're creating what tastes good, like a chef for our audience, with what we're producing, Right, So the next kind
of shot is a wide shot. Now this is showing
the subject closer up, but still some of
the environment. So we're going to use
this when we want to have a full body shot of
our character talking, speaking, doing
something of importance. But we can still see the scene
that he's in or she is in. The next shot is a cowboy
or a medium wide shot. This is generally the
knees or the shins up. We don't use this shot too much, but I wanted to put it
in here so you guys knew the terminology and you'd be able to recognize when
someone mentioned it. But it was kind of like honestly created in those old western
films where they wanted to show a full body of the character but also the gun holster that rest along the leg. That genre of like Cowboys
and Indian style of western movies created this kind of framing, to be honest. So you probably won't
use it too much, but it is still a
comfortable framing. And the other thing that I'll mention is with all
of these framings, these are like
industry filmmaking, standard type of framings
that are comfortable, wow, still conveying
a certain story. The reason I say that
is because if I were to cut off my head here
and continue to talk, this would be an
uncomfortable framing, right? If I were to come down over
here and continue to talk, it would be an odd framing because the eye level would
be low, Whatever it is, it can be used artistically
and you can break these rules in specific
scenarios where it makes sense. But all of these framings that I'm going to show you
are ones that you can use that comfortably place the subject
in the framework. In, you know, on specific areas of the frame
with their eye line at certain levels that
you can use to create something that looks good and feels right to the audience. That's the main purpose here. Next up, we have a medium
shot. This is waist high. This is, if you're talking, this is great for interviews. This is great for two characters communicating with each other. This is great for action
videos where there's a lot of movement and you want to see the character and really
see their expression, but still show enough of their
body and the surrounding. The next up is a
medium close up. This is really chest high. When I'm saying or
when the character is saying something
important, you know, this is kind of the distance that kind of a selfie video kind of gives
you a little bit. Is the chest high? It's kind of intimate, you
know what I mean? You feel like you're
with the person. So the other thing that
I'll mention with that is that the camera is acting
as your viewer's eye. You know, the camera is really where your audience
sees your video from. And so if the camera is far away from your subject or you, there's kind of a distance, There's kind of a non intimacy. And by intimacy, I just simply mean a closeness
or a connection. Or I understand you, I feel that we're
on the same page, kind of feeling, right. So the closer I get, the more of an intimate
feeling is created, right. And so that's something to keep in mind that
when we start bringing the camera closer to you or your subject
that's in your video, you're creating more
of a connection with the audience, right? When it's far away and you
want to see the surrounding, there's not really a connection
with the person it's, they're seeing, the audience
is seeing everything. But when we get closer, we're getting more connected. So the next shot is a close up. This is a lot more intimate
and this is great for saying very poignant, very
dramatic statements. If you really want
to make your point, you can cut to a close
up shot and really make your point like that versus a
wide shot that's, you know, not really pushing in
so much on the viewer, just seeing what the
character or person is projecting or displaying with their facial expressions. A close up is just
really showing the face and really
like neck high, so all the viewer has to look at is what's going on in
the person's face. Which if we know this, then we can use that for
specific scenarios in our scene when we want to say something that's very important
or dramatic. And then we have an
extreme close up, which really is just
a little bit more of a pushing on the
normal close up. And you don't really need to use this a whole lot
unless it's a very, very important part
of your scene. Or you really want to show someone's emotional response to a certain scenario where
you're filming yourself. And you really
want to, you know, say something that you
feel very strongly about. The close up is very perfect
for this moment, right? And then we have the macro shot. This can be used for the person who's in your
video that's talking, or you can actually use it
for objects in your video. Because the small
object that's becoming very large in the frame is
filling the entire frame. The viewer and your
audience is going to subconsciously feel that
this is a very important, very, very important
part of the video. Like if we show this person's
eye opening in the morning, they're going to
feel that it's oh, wow, this person just
woke up for the day. Or if we show a close
up on a certain object, the viewer's going
to feel, oh wow, okay, this object
is of importance. They're not thinking that
consciously, but trust me, they're feeling
that subconsciously and picking up on
these little things that you can use to
further tell your story.
50. 180 Framing Analysis and Shooting with Multiple Cameras: Now you have a really
good understanding of different shot types, right? The purpose of those shot types. But I wanted to add
a little extra, something sweet and
special for you. So these next two learning
lessons are actually directly from the more
theoretical deep dive into filmmaking
course that I have. But I wanted to add them in here because it's really a
perfect part of the course to just kind of give you
a little bit more of an extra deep understanding
of why certain things work, why they don't, and how that's
affecting your audience. Because that gets me really
excited and I want that, I want you to walk away with a really solid
understanding of that. So if you've seen these next two learning
lessons in the other course. Perfect. This will be
a great refresher to reintroduce these ideas to you if you haven't been
in that course. Perfect. This will be a great way
to really open your mind up to the more filmmaking
theoretical principles. So in the rest of this lecture, I'm going to be diving into creating emotion with framing. Which is once you understand these rules that
we just learned, I'm going to show you
how to break those rules to creatively create a
new and desired effect. And then I'm going to talk about shooting with multiple cameras. So let's get into it. We basically have understood how to make the viewer
feel comfortable, right, So that they are
drawn into your film. Because if the framing
is comfortable, the viewer is comfortable. If the framing is
sideways and disoriented, maybe a little shaky, the viewer is going to feel that because like I explained, we're experiencing what's
going on in the screen. The screen is doing the
thinking and feeling for us, and then as the viewer, we
experience all these things. So if you're watching
something that's funny, scary, adventurous, whatever it is, the viewer is going
to automatically be feeling all those things. Because the film is telling
them what to do, right? These are the experiences
that we're curating. So let's say at some
point in your film, your subject is feeling
boxed in instead of having the comfortable framing of the subject on the bottom third. If you frame them
on the top third, you're cutting away all the
space that that subject has above their physical
atmosphere, right? So the viewer inherently
automatically feels that they get sucked into that
emotional framing by bending that rule. Now let's say at whatever
point in our film or video we want the
subject and the viewer, because these two go hand in
hand to feel open and free. We're going to bend
these rules for that viewer to feel
open and free, and we're going to give them
space to experience that. Now if we want a little bit of a different effect and we want to invoke a more of a
thinking or mental process, that's the kind of imagery that we're going to convey
to the audience. And so if we frame the subject above the
eye level of the camera. You are looking up to the subject and the
viewer feels that, that subject is in
power because of the relationship between
the camera and the subject. Anytime you have to look up
to someone like as a child, you are looking up to, you know, elders, your parents, your teachers, physically, you have to physically
look up to them. But energetically,
there's that exchange where they're in a place of power on the other
end of the spectrum. But the subject is being looked down upon through the lens. The viewer will
feel in a place of power because they're looking
down upon the subject. It's just like in
real life where if you want to have a
comfortable conversation, you talk eye to eye. You don't talk with one person way down and one
person way above. So now let's say
we want to create a more mysterious vibe. We're going to not show
the entire story, right? We're going to hide some
things with the framing. And as you know by now, we could add lighting
into the situation and create deep shadows
mixed with framing. So you see you're creating
all of these ingredients to consciously create
specific moments and feelings for your viewers
and for your audience. So if you're shooting
with one camera, whether it's a music video, a short film, a commercial, whatever it is, it's a good good idea that you always want to shoot
your wide shots first. Knock out all your wide shots with whatever film
you're shooting, and then work your way
in and get the close up. So if you follow this procedure with all of your projects, you'll usually get all the
coverage that you need. And when you're shooting
with one camera, you're going to need
to get plenty of coverage with the environment
that you're shooting in. So that you'll have the
cutaways and you'll have the B roll shots that you need to connect your
story together. Now if you're
shooting an interview and you only have one angle, you're going to definitely
want to capture the most usable angle
for the entire video. Because you're not
going to be able to cut to separate angles
similar with this video. But what you're going
to need to do is make sure that you capture plenty of B roll that you can place on top of what the
person is saying. And now if you're shooting with multiple cameras,
something to always, always keep in mind
is to always have 45 degrees minimum between
your two camera angles. Now, why is this? This creates what we call a jump cut,
the inpost production. You'll see if you have
a camera angle here and then just about 20 degrees away from that
first camera angle, you have the same angle
from a different camera. When you cut these two together, it, there's not enough contrast
between these two shots. It's actually jarring
in a very odd way. It creates a very
weird jump cut, so it looks uncomfortable
for the viewer. What you need to do is always have the distance between
two camera angles, at least 45 degrees, that when you cut from this shot to your next A cam from B cam, there's going to be
enough contrast between those two shots to be a
proper secondary angle. The other thing to do is to have one camera always dedicated to getting the wide
coverage right, and then the other camera always dedicated to getting mediums, close up macro shots,
whatever it is. This way both of you, shooters or cameramen
or whatever it is, are on the same page. And you're getting all
that coverage that you need to weave together that
story in post production. So you always want your cameras to be complementing each other. This is why we dedicate one camera to getting
a certain angle. This creates a certain record of that story in a certain way, and then the other angle of the camera is at a
specific perspective. And maybe it's close ups or
medium shots that's capturing that same story with a
different essence as well. So these different
elements create contrast in the storytelling
process in post production, always keeping that in
mind ahead of time. You have to know
that each camera has a specific reason and a specific way that it's
capturing the story. So that in post production,
you have a very, very easy way to edit and
weave that story together.
51. 180 Degree Rule and Framing Balance: We need to talk about
the 180 degree rule. Now you have to
imagine that anytime you frame up a
shot, in this case, the orientation of the subject is on the
right of the frame, and she's looking to
the left of the frame. This creates an imaginary line of the orientation of the
camera and the subject. If we move the camera and break that line going onto the
other side of the subject, now that flips the orientation
of the entire framing. It went from the subject on the right of the frame
looking to the left, to now the subject on the left of the frame
looking to the right. So this is the premise
of the 180 degree rule, that anytime you frame a shot, you're creating a line
that has to do with the orientation of the
camera and the subject. When you move the
camera physically, let's say that you're
shooting a wide shot and you have a certain
orientation set up. And then you move
in for a close up, but you break that
line and go on the other side of
that imaginary line. You're flipping the
orientation of the framing. You're going from
looking left to right, and then suddenly the subject
is looking right to left. This isn't just for people, this is for objects. Let's say a house, a doorway, any kind of a tree, any kind of outdoor
environment, any situation. There's always going to be this 180 degree rule that once you have those
shots that you filmed, and you bring that
into post production, when you're trying
to cut wide shots with mediums and close ups. Suddenly there's a flip of orientation where
everyone's looking left and then
suddenly everyone's looking right.
Keep this in mind. When framing up your shots, it is incredibly important not to break this rule. Why is this? Because it distracts
the audience, right? If suddenly I'm talking, I'm facing this way,
and then suddenly I'm talking and facing this way. And then suddenly I'm
talking and facing this way. It throws out the audience
and it confuses them and creates a not desired
effect for the audience. We always want to
keep the audience comfortable and
engaged in our films. So the next form of
cinematic language that we use to create
these pleasing images, because that's really
what good films do, is they create this
cinematic vive, this feeling of imagery
that's pleasing to look at. So right now where
we're dissecting and breaking down
all these things and the theories behind them so that we can use these
with any equipment, any camera in any situation. So this next thing
is called frame balancing or creating
counterpoints. The gist of it is basically that every single object of interest in your frame has a
specific weight to it. So right now I'm
centered in this image. I have a certain weight
where I'm holding down the middle and center and
lower part of this frame. It's much more light and open
and there's space out here. So if we take a look
at this image where our beautiful model is framed
to the left of the screen, and there's a counterpoint
in the background, that creates an evenly
weighted frame. So like I said, each point in the frame is physically
carrying its own weight to it. Now if we have the
same exact framing, but without this counter pointed weight in
the background, you can see it's an
incredibly less of a cinematic image because
we're losing the balance. It's almost like that
image subconsciously, for the viewer,
just wants to turn over on its side, right? And what we want is to
create balanced framing. It's just like cooking, where you're creating
the perfect ingredients for this awesome,
amazing dish, right? So if there's too
much of one thing, not enough of the other thing, it doesn't have that overall
cohesive feeling And look. So now, if we take a look at
how this flower is framed, you have a left dominant
framing center, dominant and right
dominant framing, all with their own weights. So with this in mind, if we can balance out
the primary focus of an image with a secondary point of focus or reference
in the background, we can easily create much more cinematic
framing and imagery. And that does it for these
extra learning lessons that I added in after being in the editing process finishing this course, I wanted to really kind
of add in a little extra, something from the more
theoretical course. So I really hope that gives
you some cool insights. In the next learning lesson, we're going to recap our
ideas that we've gone over so far and keep moving into
more filming principles.
52. Cutaways and Shot Types Recap: Now let's talk about why
this is important, okay? The shots used determine how the viewer feels
about your video. So I'm going to
recap here a little bit so you guys can really make this understanding of
different shot types very concrete because it's incredibly important for all your
future video projects. Showing different framing of the same scene gives
depth and personality. Just like the fire footage
that we saw with the drummer, if we didn't have the
different kind of personality, framing and shot choices, it's like it just happens
in a moment, right? But when we stretch things out and show things of importance, zoom in close ups, far away shots, we get a certain feeling that we're trying to
convey to the viewer. And it transports the viewer to really the scene
that we're shooting. The goal of this is to make the ordinary action
look extraordinary. We all want our videos
to look special, and unique, and different, and impactful, and this is one of the best
ways to do that. So I'm going to walk you
guys through an exercise as well of how I do that for a
very ordinary looking scene. And of course, this is really carving out an experience
for the viewer. So we always keep our viewers attention and what they're
supposed to be seeing in mind. And to kind of use a
metaphor, you know, using these different
framing types are like words, right? Different kind of words that
when put together create sentences that become your scene or become kind of
like the paragraph, whole explanation of your video. And if you want
to dive more into this kind of theoretical
side of cinematography, and really the
filmmaking process, because filmmaking has
moved from more of an art and a passion about the
filmmaking process itself, to more video creating and
more online video use. So it's been an
interesting transition, but if you do want to
learn more about this, I'll link my other chorus
that really dives, dives more into
these fundamental, deep, deep, deep, timeless
filmmaking principles. And I also have free filmmaking tutorials
on my Youtube channel that kind of go more into this side of the video
creating process. And that about sums it
up for shot choice and knowing when to use what type of shot, very
important concept. So if you do have any questions,
hop over to the student. Q and A, put your
questions in there, and if you see any
questions from other students that you know the answer to that you
want to engage with, feel free to engage with
your fellow students. In the next lecture, we're going to be talking
about a part that I like very much which
is camera movement. I'm going to show you
guys and really give you the understanding
of how and when to use different types
of camera movement because it's called
motion picture, right? It's one of the benefits
that film and video has that photography doesn't have is the ability to move the
camera through space. And the ability to help
tell your story and make more impactful videos
through this movement. I really, really like this part, so we're going to hop into
that in the next lecture. And then we're going to
walk through creating a shot list and then you
guys are going to shadow me on how to shoot B roll using everything
that we've talked about.
53. Main Types of Camera Movement: Yes, yes, he is. One of my favorite parts of this
course is camera movement. This is one of my
favorite topics because this is like one of the coolest things as a
filmmaker is knowing how to consciously move the camera. Okay, so we're going to get into how to use camera movement. I'm going to overview the different types
of camera movement. And I want you guys
to keep in mind what resonates with you
the most out of these main different
types of movement. What resonates
with you the most, as in like what you like, what gets you excited, and then also what
you can use for your video that you're
creating during this course. The main types of camera
movement overall, the main types are a pushing, pull out, tracking
shot, arc shot, crane tilt and pan to
get more specific, the first one is a pushion, which is moving
the camera closer, going into and showing
importance in your scene. When we physically move
the camera closer, we're bringing the audience closer to what they're seeing. Creating the sense of, you know, it's a sense of like, ah, a sense of wonder, a sense
of wanting to know more. A sense of coming closer
to the information, a sense of expanding what
is being seen, right? This is kind of like more on the metaphor theoretical side, but this is the feeling that
the viewer is going to feel. So if we do the opposite and
we do a pull out movement, what we're doing is
moving the camera away, we're leaving the scene. We're ending a thought, we're really concluding
something by moving back. Like if I'm leaving
you right now, it is a different
feeling that if I'm coming in and
saying something, that's a very importance, right? So I think that's
making sense for you. The next kind of shot
is a tracking shot. This is when we're moving
with our subject, right? This is when we're
moving through a scene. The camera movement is matching
our characters movement. So the subject feels on the same page with
the viewer and the viewer feels on the
same page of the subject. Because the subject,
the viewer's eye, which is the camera, is moving along with what is
being seen, right? So it feels like
we're moving through a scene when we do
a tracking shot. The other thing to think
about with that is, without getting too theoretical, I don't know, this part
is very juicy for me. So I like to dive
into like the more of the invisible understandings
of these things. But what's happening is
with the tracking shot, you're moving with
the subject and so the subject is staying in
the same part of the frame, but the background is shifting. So that's a very unique perspective for the
camera to have. Generally, the subject is here and the camera
is moving like this, or this, or this, but a tracking shot, they're moving
together collectively. That creates a certain
type of resonance. Yeah, like the character
is staying the same, but the background is
changing and you can use that feeling very uniquely
in different scenarios. Next is the Arc Shot. This is when we orbit
around our subject. Kind of like the
way that our sun, or our Earth orbits
around the sun, where the subject stays
fixed and we move around. This creates a cool
parallax feeling where the subject is
staying the same. Similar to, relatively the same, similar to a tracking shot, but the backgrounds have
a very dramatic shift. So this is a very cool style for very dramatic scenes
when you want to keep your subject in the same
focal point of interest. Next up is a crane shot. This is where we're moving
vertically, up or down. And this is perfect for a power change or a
shift in the scene. If I were to move this
camera up or down, it would create a shift in perspective of
where I am feeling, where I am looking, where I
am in relation to the camera. And that shift
creates a certain, a change in dominance,
I want to say. But also a change
in power between the perspective of the camera and the perspective
of the subject. And when you change the
perspective of the camera, if you go above and you're
looking down on the subject, the viewer is seen through
the camera and is going to feel a different sensation
than looking up to the camera. It's very different.
Right. Next up is a tilt, and this is angling the
camera itself up or down. This is great for
reveal shots or showing the size or
proportion of something. You're simply tilting the
angle of view up or down. So it's similar to a crane shot, but without physically moving
the camera up and down, you're changing the view
of the camera where it's looking in perspective to
what it's looking at. Right? So if I tilt the camera down, whatever's in front
of that camera, I'm going to be, I'm going
to be looking down upon. If I tilt the camera up, whatever the camera is looking, I'm going to be looking up upon. It's a very different
feeling and emotional response for whoever is looking at that imagery. The final type of camera
movement is a pan, and this is angling the
camera left and right. It's a way to softly go through a scene or follow change that's happening
in front of the camera. I know that these are
a little bit more on the principal theoretical
side of filmmaking. But I do believe it's very important for you as
a video creator to be able to bring this
higher understanding of really the knowledge of filmmaking into your
more internet based, modern day type of
video creations.
54. In Depth Analysis: Camera Movement: Now let's look at what actual video examples are of these different types
of camera movement. Here we have a pushing shot, we're getting closer
to the subject. So we saw the subject's motion, and now we're seeing
the way that they feel by bringing
the camera closer. And now we're doing
the exact opposite. We're pulling away
from the subject, and now it feels
like we're leaving the scene and concluding
what we've seen. And now we're doing
a tracking shot where we're moving
with our subject. We feel like we're
there observing, watching, and feeling what the
subject is feeling, right? So here we're moving with the
subject as they're walking. We kind of feel like
we're a part of their scene going through the movements that they
are going through. And now we have an
arc shot where we're orbiting around the subject with a really cool way of keeping them generally centered in
the center of the frame. But what's going on behind
them is shifting dramatically. This is an excellent way to
create a shifting feeling. And a feeling of
that parallax where a lot of change is
happening in your scene. So you can really creatively think of a lot of
ways to use this. Here we have a crane
shot where we're pulling the camera vertically up.
Here we have another one. We're pulling the camera down, so we feel the shift in what's going on in the
scene by doing that. And here we have a tilt shot where we're showing
different aspects of our scene and creating more depth by tilting down
to our subject or object. Or tilting up to our subject, right, we're putting
them in power or in a certain place
of significance. This really creates depth and really shows the viewer how to feel about what
they're looking at. Here we have a panning
shot where we're kind of turning the page right, where we're kind of slowly working our way through a scene. Things are slowly unfolding
more and more as we pan. This is a great way
to show landscapes, to really slowly tell the story, and to really move
through our scene.
55. How Speed Effects Camera Movement: And the last thing I'll
mention on this is we have our speed of our movement. If we slowly are moving,
panning, tilting, doing a crane shot, doing an
arc shot through a scene, it's slowly unfolding that
feeling for our viewer. If we speed those movements
up while we're shooting, it creates a lot more action and a lot more energy that quickly changes and makes the
viewer feel a certain way. And so with that said, this can go really, really deep. But this is really the
overview that I really wanted you to understand in this course of the basis, right? The foundation of how
to use and understand these different key
camera movement types so that you can further
tell your story. In the next lecture, I'm
going to actually show you guys how I use
these methods of camera movement and framing and these other things
that we've talked about in relation to shooting
a shot with just one angle. To shooting the same exact shot and scene with multiple angles, with different types
of camera movement, and really telling
the story that way. And then in the
following lecture will be a learning
exercise where you guys will be able to film your own scene in
two different ways. The normal standard way and the upgraded way with
everything that we discussed. So I will see you in
the next lecture.
56. Synthesizing Your Camera Techniques: Introduction: I also wanted to do a completely different scenario with no shot list in mind, just an idea shot
completely on a smartphone. So what I'm going to do
is we have our scenario here and we're going to
have our subject lats. And he's going to be basically doing the same movement twice. And it's all going
to make sense at the end of the edit,
I promise you. But I wanted to shoot it on an iphone to kind of show you, you can string shots together
that look really good, just like shooting with the
DSL or a mirrorless camera, and you can use a smartphone. I'm going to be doing 240 frames a second for a dramatic
effect for the video. So I'm going to be
using frame rate, I'm going to be using movement, I'm going to be using
camera placement. And I'm going to be using
a series of shots back to back that create a punch line. A really cool kind
of final product. So lat is gonna
be standing here, He's going to do the same movement twice
And we're going to have this quartz light that is going to be going through this 36 inch circular
diffuser lighting our scene. We have the windows
closed in the background. This is less about getting really good lighting
and this is more about, if you have an idea
on your phone, an idea that you want to
just shoot more easily for. Maybe an Instagram story or something that's a
little bit less produced. I just want to show you another way that you can do a
cool vertical video. It doesn't always have to be a big fancy thing with
a large shot list, although that is
an excellent tool. But with that said, let's get into the
edit in no way. No, it's not an edit,
we're not editing. But with all that said, let's get into shooting this idea.
57. Hands On: Shoot a Montage with Upgraded Camera Techniques: Vats what we're going to do
is I want to have you here and I want to do like a
before and after of what. It's kind of like Tiktok style,
kind of Instagram style. Kind of like what videographers think they look like versus
what they really look like. So it's like Instagram
versus reality. So it's kind of like that.
A little bit different. But for the movement, I want you to kind of be standing kind of
like double seven. And then we'll have
to kind of see what works well with
left hand or right hand, but it's kind of like
a quick reload thing. So it's like, oh, and then you're
going to have the other one in your hand and then you go okay, and then something
like maybe then that we'll kind of
see what looks good. So I'm going to shoot
the before first with no special stuff. This is your
cinematic debut, man. So go ahead and do the
thing all the way through. Perfect. Okay, perfect. So
we have the before, and now I want to do the after. So we'll start with
you like Yeah. And try to release
it in a cool way. And then I'm going
to do close ups. Yeah. And then I'm
going to do close ups. Do the raise one more
time. So go down. Yeah, And then go up.
Let's do that again. That was really cool.
Down. Okay, up. Ah, one more. Down. Up. Oh, okay, cool. Let me get a close up
of just the release. That was pretty good,
but let's do it again. Yep. And then put
the new one in. Who, buddy? Now I want
to get a battery drop, so go ahead and like throw it right in front of the phone. Oh, here. How about this? So I'm
going to angle down a little bit and
just like like like, you don't even have to do
any of the battery stuff, I'm just not going
to get your feet but go ahead and
like drop it here. Yeah. Oh, yes. Got it. Okay, perfect. So we got
the different shots. We got the before shot, that's just kind of
one tripod shot, and then we got the
multiple montage style. So, let's see, the before
and after of that one shot versus the montage
of multiple shots. I'm followed by my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my perfect.
58. Learning Exercise: Create Your Own Montage: So it's a pretty
cool example, right? Just a very simple
action that when shot on an iphone with these
kind of techniques and these kind of principles
of using different angles, using different frame rates,
using camera movement, we can create a completely interesting and
extraordinary scene. So now it's your guys turn, it's time for you to
film one action shot. This can be anything that creatively that
you can come up with. It can be making a smoothie. It can be getting
ready for school. It can be whatever
your heart desires. Hopefully, it's something
for a video that you'll actually use to upload
to one of your channels. But I want it to be shot
in two different ways. The first way is just a
standard wide shot that you might normally document
the situation with. Okay? And the second way is the same
exact movement, or action, or activity that shot with
five to ten cutaway shots with different shot types
and the different types of movement that we covered
in the previous lectures. And then I want you to edit it into a five to ten
second montage. Now you can use music that you add or you can use
the live audio, the actual audio in the
surroundings of what you're shooting as the
backing audio track. And then you're going to
export that montage and share your video link with
the standard shot first, and then your updated montage second in the Q and A section, just like this video
example right here, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my. So let's go. What
are you waiting for? I want to see those
edits guys. Come on. Put your edits together and then upload them to the
Q and A section. And I will see you guys
in the next lecture.
59. Introduction to Your Shotlist: Perfect, so now that we've
used our action scene, that you guys just got to shoot as a practice to really nail down how to shoot
a normal scenario and make it look extra
ordinary and not normal. Right now we're going
to move into creating your shot list for
your talking scene. And your shot list, simply put, is just the cutaway shots, similar to what you just shot. But we're going to be
listening to our talking scene that ideally you've
already shot and we're going to be
picking out the visuals that match up with
the words that you were saying to
further tell your story. Whether that's a funny story, an Instagram video, Youtube
video, whatever it is. This is the same
exact technique and principle you can use
across all these videos. So let's get into it. So we're going to be synthesizing
these techniques. We're going to blend
all these different learning exercises
into one video. Our talking shot, which
is our main role, and our cutaways are
our B roll footage. And we're going to
use the addition of a shot list to help you lock down all of the
cutaway shots you need to get. So this Shotlist can
be followed very lightly as just a very
rough, you know, outline. Or it can be followed
very strictly and very heavily depending on how intricate it is, what
you're shooting. And like I mentioned,
this is great for all different types of
videos that you do. Whether it's Instagram,
Tiktok documentary, it's just really
an outline for you to get all the shots that
you're needing for your video. And I also wanted
to mention that these things can be done
in different orders. Right now, we kind
of did things in an interesting way where we like shot our talking footage and there's been different learning exercises and now we're going to do a shot list to
that talking footage. You know, of course you can do the shot list up front
and do that first. That makes sense
for the video that you're doing for the course. I try to outlay
outline it in a way that made the most sense
for you so that you could like learn
everything as we're going and then be able to put things
where they need to go. But of course, in future projects and
videos that you create, you can outline it and really do it in whatever order
works best for you. Which can mean starting
with your shot list. So it just depends
on the project. But let's jump into the shotlist that I'm
going to be working on that you can do along with me for your talking footage. I'm going to hop
into the one for my coffee video that
you guys have seen.
60. Learning Exercise: Create Your Shotlist: Okay, perfect, so what we
have here is our shot list. So if you haven't already, please download the shot list in the downloadable resources tab in the lecture of this course. And so I have my blank shot
list here and I also have my overall kind of script that I just kind of typed out some bullet points
of what I'm saying. This will be the easiest
way for us to follow along and create the shot list. So first I start off with this, I have a confession to make. It's tough to say I'm
addicted to coffee. This is going to be definitely
a shot of me. Okay. So what I'm going to do here
is me sitting a desk. Okay. And the shot type is going
to be a medium shot? Yes. Because we remember the different shot types
and because it's a way, step shot, this
is a medium shot. Okay. Character is
going to be Julian and a location is going
to be living room. Now for the cells where we
have the actual imagery, this can be hand
drawn or you can pull these shots
from the Internet. I'm not going to do
any hand drawn stuff for timing in this course, but you're more than welcome to have this printed
out and draw just an overall
general aesthetic of what you envision
that shot looking like. For this example, what I'm going to do is
pull a screenshot. The framing that I know I'm
going to have, okay, perfect. Since we know this is
going to be our framing, I'm going to take a screenshot and you're more than welcome to download the
shot from online, go through Pinterest, go through Instagram,
whatever it is, screenshot it to get
the right style. That makes sense for the
video that you're shooting. Boom, there we go. So yeah, you know, this
realization hit me earlier today and so we have
our first overall shot done. Okay, Now I'm going to move
on to the next main part of the video where I
know I'm going to have another important shot. I say I just love the
whole experience of it from start to
finish, the beans. The texture of
those sweet beans. So what I'm going to
do here is definitely grab a shot online that I like. That's a close up on
the coffee beans. This is definitely the
vibe I'm going for. What I'm going to do here is
save it to our screen shot number two. Okay, perfect. And of course, you know, you can really fill this
out as much as you want and get as in detail as you need
to, depending on, you know, if it's a more straightforward online video that's kind of you doing something that's a funny montage and it's kind of more candid and more casual. You can maybe have three main shots that are
very important that you know, that need to make
it into the video. That could be your opening shot, your middle shot, and
your ending shot. You know, if it's more of a serious tone,
characters and dialogue. Or you got hired to
do a project for a doctor's office
and you're doing interviews they're
going to want to see. And you're going to
want to know ahead of time the overview of what
you're going to be doing. So please use this as in depth as you'd like for this purpose. For time's sake, I'm going to be a little bit more brief here, but I want you guys
to be able to get the idea of the workflow
and how this process works. So for the next shot,
the scene is going to be in my kitchen and
this is going to be close upshots of beans and
coffee making process. So I could list out those
specific processes. Processing processes, I
don't know about the word, but I could list out
those specific ones of being, you know, heating up the water,
getting out the beans, getting out the French press, the coffee maker
hitting the button. I'm going to keep it broad here, but have enough information so that while I'm
glancing at it, while I shoot, I know exactly
what I need to shoot. And this is B roll, okay? And I'm going to put
close ups because I know a lot of these
shots are going to be really tight close shots, so you can see the detail of
the beans and the coffee, and the steam and all
those cool things that I want to be accentuating
with what I'm saying. So the next main point
here is brewing it, taking all the finely
ground coffee beans ring and piping out water. So what I want for that is
going to be something that is. Yes. Okay, perfect. Yeah, I want to see that
shot that's showing the ground coffee going into the coffee machine
or the French press, depending on what I
end up shooting with. Okay, we're going to
call this shot three. This is a very important shot. Okay, I really do. Also like one thing about this, one is directly overhead. That's going to be a unique
view for this kind of scene. Where it's like a
creating process of a quick montage of different
steps of a final process. It's cool to have
the top down angle, so this is perfect
placing coffee, coffee grounds, into
machine, hot, hot water. And I'm just going to skip
forward here a little bit to pouring coffee. Let's see, Yeah, I want to
do something like this. I like the vibe, We see the
condensation, good lighting. This is just a
really cool style. So I'm going to save
this as a reference. Boom. What I'm going to do now
is skip to the final shot, because we have the
part in the video where it cuts back to me. I deliver the punch line, and then it's the
end of the video. I already know what that's
going to look like. So let me just as a
brief description, I'm going to say
final punch line. Me cut to me holding coffee cup. A role character. Yeah, on second
thought. There you go. This is really an overview of how to properly use a shot list. And of course it's
important to be flexible with this feature
films go all the way over to the very structured
side where these are used like a science and like complete with
complete perfection. Because there's so many
people on the project, there's so much time, and there's so much
money being poured into it that every
second counts. And so it's really a guideline
or a framework for you to use that the
professionals use to a T. But for us video
creators that are creating for more
online content, of course you can ignore
using something like this. And your videos may be okay. Of course, you can implement
using something like this to the degree that
makes sense for you. And it's going to
make your videos just a little bit better because not many people are
taking the time to really plan out what's
going on, what's happening. And this little extra
step really can go a long way with making your
videos more impactful, more enjoyable to watch, more straightforward
and to the point. So go ahead fill out your shot list or finish
filling out your shot list, because in the next lecture I'm going to be doing a crash course with you guys on filming
your epic B role. So you want to have an idea of what you want to be filming. You're going to be working
alongside me as I'm shooting these shots that I just laid out in this learning
exercise with you guys. I'm going to be actually
filming them using shot types, using camera movement
and all that good stuff. So with that said, let's get into the next lecture.
61. Optimize Your Settings For Your Montage: Perfect. So what we're going to do now is I'm going to take you through the process of taking your shot list that
we've created together. And I'm going to shoot this coffee montage that you've seen, the kind of silly voice
over that I did for it. But my friend Laz, who's holding the
camera right now, is going to be our subject
doing the coffee ninja things. And I'm going to be
shooting multiple shots, knocking out the shot list, knocking out the
different shot types. And I'm going to kind of
walk you through what I'm doing and why I'm doing it. So before we kind of
switch into that mode, I want to first set
up my camera for the best looking settings
for this scenario now, because I know ahead of time
that this is going to be a montage with a bunch of
shots strung together, edited to soundtrack,
and a voice over. Definitely a voice over, maybe
a soundtrack, maybe not. But I know I want these to
be slow motion shots with movement to make coffee beans and pouring look a
lot more interesting. Movement helps and everything looks better in slow motion. So what I'm going to
first do is go into my settings and I'm going
to switch my recording mode to 60 or 59.94 which most
cameras shoot all eye, which is the highest
quality for my camera. My picture profile is
going to be my homemade, personally made neutral setting that we've talked about
earlier in the course. And for my white balance, I'm going to actually turn
and look at the scene. I'm going to be
shooting to find out what kind of color temperature
is going to be, right? We can see here that that's
a little bit to tan, right? About 4440500 should be perfect. So now my camera
settings are on point. Now it's time to start shooting.
62. Hands On: Main Techniques to Film What's On Your Shotlist: All right, so perfect,
get your lats. So we have my buddy lats. He's been recording the behind the scenes for us
during this course. And what we're
going to do now is translate our shot list that we worked on and I'm going to go through and get these shots. Now I want to say that
before we hop into it fully, I'm going to be
shooting on a 24 to 70. And the reason I'm doing
that is because for this specific type of B role
that we're shooting for, the voice over that I made, we're focusing in on details, almost macro shots,
very close up. So I want to be able to get
to 70 Mill so that I can shoot real close ups of the details and of
what we're seeing. It's not a big wide
landscape shot where I want to lat in the
background and everything we're
focusing in and getting really cool slow motion
shots of very small objects. So that's the premise. I'm going to flip my camera
on and we're going to first start with the coffee ground
shot shot number two. Shot number one is already shot. That's my voice over where I'm start the beginning in the video about my love for coffee. Then the next shot is going
to be what we mentioned, close ups of the beans and
the coffee making process. So I'm going to turn my shutter speed to
double my frame rate. So I'm shooting at 60
frames per second. That means my shutter
speed is going to be at 1:25 And then I'm going to have my aperture
all the way open at 2.8 And I'm going to be
kind of moving around, tapping my screen to focus and getting all the
good shots that I can. So flats. Why don't you
go ahead and start with, why don't you go like zoo with it with your hand
so kind of like dry, you know what I mean? Go ahead. Okay, that
was not in focus. Go ahead. Perfect. Okay, that right there is our intro shot with the bag
of beans that I was at 24. For that one, I want to do
some close ups now because we see the bag here and we want
to cut this little tab. If I were to do that with
this kind of wide shot, go ahead and pick up
the knife in the bag, and I just want to show what it looks like. Go ahead
and pick it up. We're not going to
actually cut it, but if you just hold that angle yourself so that you're in the light a little
bit other way, angle yourself so that,
yeah, there you go. If he were to do it like this, it doesn't look too dramatic. Now, if I move from
24 mill to 70 mil, we can see that this is
a lot cooler of a shot. Yeah. So maybe
what I want you to do is kind of like this. And then you see how
I'm really close here, we can see the
details of the bag. Now, go ahead and
cut it perfect. Now we can, why don't you? Yeah, why don't you
kind of hold it up. It's good when you're
kind of angled a little bit so that that
light is coming in. Yeah. And you see, it's a lot more dramatic
because I'm really pushed in this framing compared to that. Framing is way different. Yeah. Roll it back down
and then go ahead and unroll it perfect. Go ahead and do
that one more time. I want to get a side angle. 1 second. Okay, go ahead. So what I did right there is
I did a camera movement with kind of almost a
tracking shot of his fingers as they were moving. Oh, that does smell good. So there was a tracking shot
moving with what he's doing. And the other thing
I want to mention is our table has other stuff on it, so it only matters what's in the frame is what you
really want to focus on. I'm not all the way back
here with all this stuff. I'm really choosing as
the cinematographer, what the audience should see. And shooting it in
an interesting way, as much as possible, to get the most
impactful imagery. God, that feels so good. So I'm going to get
a little bit of a lower angle here because his knife is going to
pierce through the bag. So one sec and I'm going to kind of do a push in shot where I'm moving in as he's
doing the cut ready. And go ahead. Perfect. And then I want you to kind
of like. Yeah, exactly. And we'll try and get
some light in there. So I'm going to bump the Iso up because it's pretty
dark inside this bag. So go ahead and close
and then go ahead open. Okay, we just got to
do it a few times. Yeah, go ahead. That
was pretty good. So I'm directly above shooting straight down because
this is the best kind of angle to get this dramatic shot where I'm kind of directing him on
how I want to open the bag. I can just shoot the beans like this and there's no movement
or there's no reveal. But kind of directing
your subject or your actor or yourself in
your video For the be roll, it helps for you to get
more dramatic shots. One thing I also wanted to
add a little bit of a hack. See I'm doing this all handheld be cause I
want this to be very applicable to people who don't have stabilizers or
anything like that. If you use your camera, you can get a pretty solid base. If you position the strap across your shoulder and you're
putting tension against it, this minimizes the
shake of the camera. So as you can see here, if I'm not using the
strap, it goes like this. And as soon as I
press into the strap, I have a much steadier shot. But let's get back to
this kind of bean shot. So we'll do a test. Go ahead and pour a decent
amount in slowly. Go ahead. That's a lot, Ty. So what I'll do is
I'll kind of get some. Why don't you kind of do this, Okay, like that a little bit. Yep, go ahead. So
here I'm at 70 Mill. Just kind of going back and forth to get a cool
movement with the beans. Okay, I'm going to increase
my ISO a little bit, because these beans
are pretty dark. But you can see the
difference between 70 Mill and 24 Mill. This looks very average
like a home movie style, but if we really push into it, creates a lot more
depth and focus on only what we want the
viewer to be looking at.
63. Hands On: Camera Movement and Enhancing Your Montage: Okay, so we got the cool shots, the slow motion
shots of our beans, of opening the bag, of doing those kind of
cool cinematic things. We shot everything close and tight to make it
look more dramatic. Now what we're going
to do is hop to having the coffee grounds. Putting that into
the French press. Now, I don't have one of
the coffee blender things, so we're going to kind
of magically jump here from the beans to the grounds. But let's shoot this process
and see what it looks like. So on this shot specifically, I'm going to do a
relatively quick pushing like that to add drama to him turning the spoon and dropping
in the coffee grounds. Okay, go ahead. Perfect. Now, let's do one more. I want to tilt the camera
like this when you, so point it directly at me, like if my camera,
my camera's here. And then we're going to
do this together, okay? So you can just
hold it right here. So I'm going to kind of try
an experimental shot here. I'm going to have
the camera here. And then when he turns it,
I'm going to turn with him, so I'm going to shoot
a little bit wider. That gives me more room for error, for
turning the camera. But on the counter here,
I say 123 and then we go. So 123, sweet. Okay, cool. Now this is brewing, so we're going to wait until we start to get some bubbles. And I'm going to shoot a
slow motion shot at that. And then we will get
our cool pouring shot. Now the reason
that as I'm going, I'm doing movement is because if we shoot
this stationary and it, and it's just kind
of a tripod shot with not a lot of movement, It's not going to create
a whole lot of character. So camera movement
creates personality. If I move the camera and I dramatically push the
camera towards an object, that creates a sense of urgency. Now if I have that same exact object and I
slowly pull away the camera, that creates a sense of calmly leaving scenario or situation. So you're pointing
at what you want your viewer to see
and how you move. The camera tells them
how you want them to feel about what they're seeing. So I want the viewer to feel excited and
kind of like whoa, you know, because to
make it look good, you want to add a
little something else. So you can do that
with lighting, you can do that with
camera movement. And you can do that
with kind of having your subject that
you're shooting bureau with do things that are synchronized with
what you're doing. Kind of planning things
out a little bit. So we're taking our shot
list and translating these images and descriptions into impactful imagery that
makes it uniquely yours. So you don't always have to
be doing camera movement, you don't always
have to be doing close ups like I'm doing. These are just tips
that you guys can do to really make it your own and make it your own personality
and your own style. Should be chilling. Okay, cool. So we're starting to
get some bubbles. So I'm at 70 mill and I'm on manual focus with
something like this, that's a little bit
tricky to shoot. You kind of want to shoot at
multiple different angles. Because something like
water with bubbles in it, can look really interesting
if it's shot, right? Or can look really boring
if it's not shot, right. So I'm experimenting with multiple angles and
different framings, different distances.
Okay, Perfect. So now we should have
plenty hot water shots. Boiling water shots,
What I want to do is I'm going to start with
the angle down here, because we can only
get that shot once. We can only get him the water hitting the
coffee grounds once. So I'm going to start with
the close up down here. And then I'm going to pause
what we're doing and then I'm going to get a close up of the pore of the
water coming out. So you really want to think
ahead of time what you can only shoot once you have
one opportunity to get, we can only get these coffee
grounds getting wet once. And plan that out as you're
going through your shoot. You want to have as
much of it planned out before you start
shooting as possible, but sometimes you get things set up and then you plan it out
just before you get shooting. So let's go ahead
and get that set up. I'm going to do a little
bit of an orbiting shot here where I'm going to slide the camera kind of along the table to get kind of a
dramatic wraparound shot. And this is by no means like
perfect framing or anything, but it's kind of, you know, it'll do for this kind of sheet. So let me set my focus and I'm going to do a practice shot
because like I said, we only have one go here. I want to start
here, set my focus. And when I get rolling, then I'm going to
tell him to pour. So I'm going to go to the
beginning of my shot. You can go ahead and
start pouring slowly. Perfect here, I'm going to do a
rack focus where I go from the water to the coffee. And now I want to get a
close up of the bubbles. So I'm going to use the
rim of the glass as a little bit of foreground
and then move in like that. So go ahead and do
some more pouring. So I have the rim of the
glass in the foregrounded. I'm going to move into
the inside of the cup. Okay, perfect. Now I want
to get just the stream. Perfect. Okay, good. And you want to also
keep in mind that not everything you shoot
you're going to use. So you kind of want to
shoot stuff as much as you can because out of the
20 shots that you shoot, you may only use eight, You may only use five, you may only use four. It
really depends.
64. Hands On: In Camera Transitions and Impactful Ending Shots: Now I want to get the kind of French press going down shot. So you can go ahead
and kind of put it there and then
slowly move it down. So I'm going to kind of
do it tilt down as he's pressing the coffee.
French press down. So you can go ahead now, let's do that again. I want to get a little bit of a wider shot because I'm
not sure if that's the one. I want to use, the close up. And I'm going to do something a little bit different
for this one. So we'll go ahead and do that same movement
and I'm going to move down as he's
doing it, so go ahead. Perfect. Okay, perfect. So I did a transition down with him
as he was pressing down. And we're going to use the
wipe from this table for me to use as a transition
into the next shot. The next shot is
going to be pouring, so let's get you a cut buddy. So I came down under the table. Now I want to match that
same exact movement into the beginning of
the next shot to make a seamless cut using
camera movement. And kind of that we effect, it'll make sense when you
see these two cut together. So we're going to take a moment to what's called block this out. Where you work with the person who's doing
the camera work. And then you work with
the talent in front of the camera to set up the
movement correct for the shot. So flats. What I want to kind of do is like the
cameras here on like this and you like wipe down and then like ninja that. It's okay. So we'll do it a few times without you pouring.
Okay. Go ahead. Okay. So I kind of want
to move everything a little bit out of
the way because we're doing a little bit of a
wider we're not going to be shooting this at 70 'cause
there's movement happening. And I want to keep
everything in frame as much as possible.
So we'll go ahead. Yeah. I mean, this will be
the first real deal test. Go ahead. That was a pretty heavy pour, bro, but I think
that'll look good. I really like that one, but we're going to do
with stuff like this where it's your ending shot of your montage or your video. You want to make
sure you nail it, So we're gonna do
that one again. Yeah, that needs to be
lined up. Okay, go ahead. Amazing ending shot by lats. Now I'm going to cut
these shots together, add the slow motion, do a little bit
of stabilization, and we're going to see what the final product of
these raw shots look like compared to the final edit where we kind of add that
little gloss and refinement of all the tools and tips
that we learned so far in this course to these was
shots for your montage. And here is that final edit. So yeah, you know, this
realization hit me earlier today. Kind of It's hard to say. Yeah, it's hard to say. But I am addicted to coffee. I just love the
entire experience of those lovely textured beans. And then brewing it when
you pour that piping, hot water over those freshly
ground beans, you know what? And then sometimes I feel
like maybe I don't need this. Maybe this is something
that I should stop indulge. Yeah, you know what, I
think I'm gonna stop today. Yeah, on second thought. I think I'm gonna get a
second cup. Yeah, boy.
65. Learning Exercise: Shoot Your Epic B-Roll: Okay, so now it is time for you to shoot your epic,
amazing looking role. We've been really working up to this point in the
course and yeah, I'm excited to see
what you come up with. So what we're going
to be doing is making your own upgraded video. So I want you to choose a specific action to
shoot B roll footage of. This should be the
visuals that match up with your role or main
speaking footage. Okay, the audio of your
video here can be from what we shot or you can add
your own new soundtrack. So you can either use
the audio if I were to shoot my hand doing
this and if I use that sound that's using the audio from that
footage make sense versus putting in a
soundtrack like so. Right. So you can really get
as creative as you want. But yeah, there has to be some form of audio
that's being used next. The point is to make your average looking video sound and feel amazing using the
techniques that we've learned. So I'm going to demonstrate
potentially what that can look like with
my coffee video. So yeah, you know, this
realization hit me earlier today. It's kind of, it's hard to say. But I am addicted to coffee, those lovely textured
beans, and then brewing it. When you pour that
piping hot water over those freshly ground
beans, you know what? And then sometimes I feel
like, so you see, right? You're using cutaway
shots to really upgrade the feeling and the production value
of your video. So now it is your turn. I want you to film the B roll
for your talking footage. Okay, First step is to use the abril as your base
layer of footage. The second step is to shoot five to ten shots with different shot types and camera movement
that we've learned. Then you're going to
edit your footage together and you're going
to export and share the video link with the combined A role
and B roll footage in the Q and A section. And with that said, I don't
want you guys to get too hung up on making an amazing edit or having crazy editing
transitions or tricks or like coloring or anything that's super in depth On the
post production side, this is not a post
production course, this is a production course, filming course where, yeah, we're really focusing on
getting all the ingredients right before getting all crazy with the edits and
trying to make it look cool. I really want you guys to
focus on what you shoot, what you use in your shot list, and really what you basically what ingredients you
create that are really good before trying to
make it seem and look, and feel better in
post production. So if you do want to get
into the post production, that's a different
course, this one. I really want you guys to
focus on what you're shooting. So I'm excited to see the edits that you put together
and share in the Q and A, And if you have any questions, feel free to ask those as well. And I will see you
in the next lecture.
66. Introduction to Learning Session with a Full Time Photographer and Video Creator: All right, so I trust that you
have been utilizing all of these hands on
learning exercises to really put to work and embody, physically experience
the information that we've gone over
and really been taking advantage of these
learning activities and sharing your content with
your fellow students. So in this chapter
we're going to be getting some expert advice from a close filmmaker friend of mine who's had years of experience working
with high end clients. You met him earlier
in the course. He's really an equipment
and technology specialist, so he's going to be
sharing a lot of insights for you to really think about what kind of
camera you want to use, what kind of camera
you're using, how to maximize that camera, the different
available technology and equipment that's out there. And what will really match up
with what your desires are, what your end goal is, the type of content
you want to produce. And really mixing
all that together. So grab a pen and pencil. Sit back and really soak in
these next learning lessons.
67. Advice From an Expert: Entry Level Video Equipment: What is guys? So here we are. We are with Louis
today, how's it going? Yes. We got to see him
earlier in the course on that onset experience
that we did in our downtown Los
Angeles video shoot. Now today what we're going
to be doing is kind of just going over
entry level cameras, more professional cameras,
shooting on a phone, and shooting on different
ranges of cameras. And Louisa and I are
going to kind of just chat about
what the pros and cons are of each type of
equipment, and really, how far you can push each kind of equipment
depending on the sensor and depending
on all of its functions. So where do you kind of
want to start off with? Do you want to start
off on the lower end? And then we kind of
work our way up. What do you think I could
say where I started? I mean, when I
started filmmaking, I would say I have a good
friend of mine named Eve, who is a really well
known videographer that does beauty
work and eco and, and mostly in the beauty,
in the beauty world. But he started me off with
this camera as a GH five. And to this day this camera
is still the workhorse king. I mean, honestly, like you can get this camera for
less than two grand, maybe less than 1,000 And, and you can put a
variety of lenses like the 18 to 35 cannon. It's a micro four thirds sensor. So what that means
is that you can put a speed booster and really just upgrade
the lenses as you go. You could put all
the way to like PL mounts if you wanted to. There is limitations
when it comes to that. I mean, there's things
like what is it called, noise and stuff like that, like low light,
it's not a good low light camera or anything. But if you want to be a
Youtuber and you want to get a good content, commercial grade videos like this is the camera, honestly. Because it has all the flavors, it has the Panasonic code
and stuff like that. You know, not pros but video like Mov do those things that you can use
for your editing. And Ali and this camera, I've used it for so long. I buy and sell. You know, I buy and sell
my cameras like crazy. And I've had Sony's for the
years. Have you known me? And this one has been the most that has done the work for
me. You know what I mean? So you'd recommend this for
people that are wanting to do more than lo this was
more like short film, like I want to stylized
video that you want more colored fidelity
that you want to be able to color at
an affordable price. Uh huh. Mm hm. And then then, I mean, you know the iphone, everyone knows the iphone. They've gone through
a lot of generations. And I feel that now since they added the hylands on this one, it's been a workhorse on its
own and on its own look, when you get that we lens, you realize like, damn, I never knew that I
needed a why lens. And then you start getting really creative with your shots, with the wide shots
and all that. But I like using this as like a directors, a
director's viewfinder. And I use this app
called Filmic Pro, okay? And when they released
the iphone 11 pro, right, they released this app. And then this app gives
you all the flavors audio, different video
code, slow motion, and it activates more
parts of the camera. And then they have this
thing called double take. So if you're a logger
and you want to get a front and back interview
of you talking to someone, you can record both cameras. So front and back. And you choose the lens blank, so I don't know if
you can see it, so what it is like so I could see him and you
can see the background, but yeah. Yeah, There you go. Yeah. So this is a
good way of like, if you want to get
that quick, you know, interview status or like
go because kind of like everything that's
happening right now with Tiktok and Instagram, everybody wants to do
very quick and dirty. You know, like let's, let's get it really quick
and go, you know. And that's kind of been my
last resort kind of thing. And I've had used this on a
couple of beauty bloggers. When I went on set with them, they wouldn't allow these
cameras inside of a restaurant. Stuff like the things
that need permits. So I would put this
on a cage with a little handle
and an LED on top. I put a small rig cage is what it's called
and with audio and everything and this
thing is fully ready to go and rig auto focus go. And honestly, a lot of people don't notice the difference. They think it's DSLR sometimes. So I would say that, yeah, like we're speaking on now,
smartphones specifically. But yeah, for that one, it holds up really well. When you do get to let's
say color correction, you want to push and pull colors around super, it
kind of falls apart. One thing I want to mention
about if you are shooting on a smartphone and you're
going in that direction, because you already have maybe
an iphone 11 and you don't want to buy a new
camera on top of that. It is a definite possibility. But what these phones do is they already optimize and bake
in color correction, sharpening stabilization
on top of the footage, so it looks great coming
out of the camera. But if you get some
of those shots into your editing software and
you want to update them, make them look a certain
way, color them, stylize, it's really difficult. That's where the
biggest differences are between shootings
on something like this, that's a little bit
more expensive. And then shooting on
something that's a lot more practical, like Louise said, you can roll up in a
restaurant and start shooting Yeah. And
get away with it. This is the kind
of trade off and also the dynamic range
is another big thing. Although these are
getting a lot better. Yeah, they So what
would you say for someone wanting to go
in this direction? What kind of equipment
You mentioned your rig that you have and we'll have
cutaway shots on screen. What are some must
have items that you'd recommend for the phone For sure if you're going to
do the phone a cage. Because if you get a cage
with mounting points on it, those mounting points help
to do like tabletop shot. I've done tabletop shots many times with
the iphone where I couldn't rig up this big
old behemoth down and on. And I did it before, but
it requires a lot of work. Sometimes I'm a one man band and they won't notice because
it's all ten ADP and I hardly get four
K. They ask for a four K and this
thing is very capable of four K but color
is worth it lax. But Right. I would
just rig this. Yeah. With some
mounting points on it. Like like I said,
like the small rig, they make really good cages
for every type of phone, Samsung iphone, even
the older iphones. And with that saying then, once you have that, then
everything is a possibility. You could put this
on a little cart, you could put this on a
drone. You can do things. You could get way better footage this than the drone can get. You know what I mean? So things like that and then it's
light weight, you know? What about audio?
What do you do? Audio? Audio has always been a big issue
because they got rid of the iphone jack which
is all piece Yeah. Piece. But what I
usually do is I get like a splitter that has
a audio jack or something. But honestly, I try to do get like a professional
microphone like this is what I would use. This is actually my microphone that I just got and
I use it for it. Is this road TG? This is supposed to
be the video mic pro, and an NTG professional
microphone smashed into one. And what I like about this
one is that you can use it as a laptop mic so you
could do podcasting. That's what they made
this for, is for people that want to use
it on our laptop, connect it straight to USBC, and get that podcasting
kind of audio out of it. If you don't want
to do that, then you want to put it
on your iphone. Then they made a special TRS or whatever so you could
put it on the iphone, but what you
wouldn't need there, your adapter that comes
with the microphone. Yh.
68. Advice From an Expert: Pros and Cons of Cameras and Equipment: I kind of want to move to now. I think professional,
The lowest. Yeah, The more
professional side. So we have the more
entry level you want to shoot with
your smartphone then, this is the more entry
level camera itself. You said this was about,
I would say it started, it was like a 2000. And the lens and everything, because the lens is
pretty expensive. This is a 12 to 3,052.8 This
is equivalent to the 18 to 3,051.8 but 1.82 0.8 And
we'll get back to this lens, but this one I know you can get it way
lower than what it is. And they already made better
versions like the S one, which is the full
frame flagship. Right? And these cameras, the Panasonic, are
just workhorses. Okay. And what the one thing
that you will trade off is, yeah, the auto focus
may be not that great but it's a good overall. Like if you want
something where you damn, you can just change colors
and really work on it. This is the camera and the
file is so huge either. And you can use SD
cards, which is awesome. You use two of them. It's a good camera, it's
a good photo camera too. Has good skin colors. And that's what I look for
is like something with good coloring and dynamic
range and what Yeah. And that's why I like this
one and I still use it to this day as Cam. I
just have to match it. And sometimes a pain, but I got good enough at
coloring that I can actually make it look like
it, look at anything. Right. And that's something that's a really good
point actually, is the practicality versus the payoff of the
footage you get. I think a lot of the
times we can be like, I need this
stabilizer and I need to buy this and buy that
and buy this and buy that. Some of equipment
that you purchase, you will use one on every ten times you shoot,
once in a blue moon. The other stuff is
things go in and out of trend on the way that
they look at one point. Those lens baby distorted lenses were so popular and they would create these
cool distortions. Now the whole prism in front of the lens is pretty popular. So you really want
to keep in mind that you want to
buy with longevity. You know, like you
can get away with the stabilization
on your smartphone. Probably if you want
to buy one of those, like 60, 70, $80, gimbles for the
smartphone, you can. But it's just something
to keep in mind that as stuff changes now
the really smoothness of a handheld shot on the R five to me
aesthetically actually looks better in a lot of situations than the straight
up gimble shot, so yeah. What was your opinion on the
footage you saw in the R? I loved the footage. So
of course we all went through the footage at the beginning of the
course together. And the R five, I had it side by side with the one DX mark two
that we're shooting on right now for this main
camera and the coloring, the smoothness, I really liked color correcting
this footage. I was able to really make
it look how I wanted to, which was really good and I was blown away because
I'm filming behind the scenes of you and
then you're doing a hand held shot and walking.
What was your old yoga? Yeah. Yeah, like straight up. So all the video
techniques I learned in the past ten years ago,
I say seven years. A long time. A long time. I
learned it from this guy. Yeah, this guy is
the one that those yoga videos like when I
was watching the footage, I'm like, Oh, Pacman, he's doing this with every show. Yes. Because that's the
best way to do it. I mean, just learning how to do your stepping and all that. But the reason why I got this
camera, I had Sony's right. If I had the 6,500
I had the seven, two, I had the 7373. But those are my photo cameras. Seven, three was actually
a good camera and if you're someone that
can't afford this camera, which is brand new and
just came out the seven, Sony R three is a great
camera still to this day. Great autofocus,
great everything. But don't get stuck in the technical stuff because it's not really
about the technical, it's about the story. The only reason why
I got this camera is because the clients that I
deal with, it's beauty, right? And they just love cannon color. And they always ask for cannon, they always give
me gift about it. So what is the main reason
that you went with the R five? So on, the main reason was why I switch everything from Sony
to Cannon was the glass. I just love the glass. I've always loved it and
I've already have it. So I don't need to like I won't lose money
if I switch over. And the stabilization. The stabilization and the codec. So the codec I mean like the ten bit four two to that
sort of thing, Judge, and can you explain
that briefly so I get more range of color like I mean, everything now is
giving you 42210 bit now and just having
ten bit is fine. There's some cameras like
this one does 12 bit, right? And the Alexa, the more
higher and like red, that was like 16 I think or I don't know, like
really high numbers. But those are high data. So this camera, I mean I can
shoot ten bit 422 all day. And that gives me the flexibility to go and post and really play
with the color. If I feel that it's wrong
or my blacks are too black, you know, that's
something that happens a lot where I lose the blacks. And it's kind of like
this faded, grainy look. And I just, I can push
and pull, you know, lift a person out of a
dark environment and give them a bright look without sacrificing artifacts
and stuff like that. And those are technical things. But I'm not telling you, it should not deter you from
telling a story, right? Because all this is doing
is telling a story. I mean, you are a
creative and the creative should be not limited
by their gear. And that's something that
you taught me, I think, and a couple other
people on set. And I've seen a lot of
huge professionals on set like like Tony
Duran, all right? Yeah. And those guys, they just go with a cannon
and they're just like doing like what I was doing
and their shots look amazing. You know? Like I did that
one thing with Kim Kurd, Ashan, and that was done
for the holiday campaign. That was done with the
cannon five, four. Yeah. You know, and he said,
set it up for me, you know. Alright. I put it in
ten, 80 because he does not like shooting
in four. Uh huh. He finds it very
hard for himself to edit. So I'm just
like, wait what? Like, I'm like, I got
this dope camera here, let's just use this 16. And he was like, No, no, no, no. It was like, it's
too much for me. I need under like a
few hundred kicks because he doesn't want
to do a file. Yeah, yeah. And then when I saw the
after was like, oh, it's because he threw all
these layers and they already have like a look to it
because it's social media. But when you want to go into
like film, like real film, then then we start going into these big
boys. Right, right. This camera, the pocket six. Hey, literally does
everything I needed to do. Yeah. I mean, I can do a
commercial job on this. I can do weddings, I can do the stuff. Anything I needed to
do, I could do it. Just the file sizes are huge. But what I like about
this camera a lot then then all these is
that it's bare bones. And what I mean by that is
like I can plug and play. I could put a hard
modular, right? Very modular uses cannon mount. It uses a Super 35 sensor, so don't get wrong
like micro four, three, full frame and Super 35. All that doesn't matter as
long as it can handle the ten bit 422 and it can transcode it at a
nice file structure that you are able to
edit on your computer. Because some people don't
have supercomputers and high end Max and
stuff like that, and I don't have a high Mac, and I use Premiere or Da Vinci and literally just throw that in there and
it's ready to go. I don't have to
transcode, you know. Yeah, I think one thing
to mention too that makes this large leap is that
these all shoot these three. Shoot photo and video. That means they both, they shoot both those things pretty well. When you get to something
like this hybrid, this is just for video. So it's going to do
just video really well. It's kind of like similar between a zoom lens
and a prime lens. A zoom lens is going to get you a multitude of different
focal lengths. And it's going to do each
focal length really well. But a prime lens is
going to get you, like for this example,
this is what, 28 or 50. 50, right? Yeah, this is a 50. It's
gonna only shoot a 50 mill, but it's gonna do 50
mill really well. So 50 mill on this compared to 50 mill on this is going
to be like the night. This is the same thing where it doesn't do multiple things. It does one thing really well. And what's the
price point of the. So this one, this, the camera body alone. I think you can get it for now. See black magic, Black
magic wants the filmmaker, the indie filmmaker
to, to thrive. And, and like you said, no compromises and
being creative. And they put in all that software like Pros
that all the things that, when it, when you go and edit, you don't have to transcode,
you have to do it, it's just ready to go edit. And it's just like a
plug and play a camera. And I love that
about this camera. And what I like about
it is they give you so many IO options like audio. They even give you an
auxiliary for you could put a professional
microphone so you don't have to go and buy these expensive
microphones like a zoom, you know, H five or any of
that. It's all built in. There's, there's phantom
power. There's everything. And so for the body, I think you can get them for
like 2,100 That's enough. Which is not bad. I
mean, this one was what? 30530800. And that's just the body in the lens is another
grand, right? So I did spend a lot of money. The only reason
why I got this is because I needed
something to run and gun. I mean, there's scenarios
were I need run and gunning. Yeah. And this one
I can't do it. I can cause I can put it
against my chest and shoot. But how long can I do that
without getting tired? And also there is
limitations in this camera. But other than that, you're getting this camera if you want cinema quality imagery and the files to be able to do all types of
things, you know what I mean? You will be spending
a lot of money on cards and possibly batteries, but I rig this up so
I can use V mount. So V mount, it's kind
of like a standard V mount and gold mount
are standard batteries. And I highly suggest
anybody that wants to really
get into it is get V mount batteries or
gold mount V mount is my favorite because
they're really affordable. And then you can last for days. I mean that for days, I'm sorry, you can last for 6
hours to 8 hours plus just one battery. And this battery will
power your monitor, your lavalier, mix
your antennas. Because I have an
antenna that, so this whole rigged tilta is rigged up so I
can put an antenna, I can put a monitor, I can put, you know, just all kinds
of rigging materials. I can hang it off of a ceiling. That's why it looks
like a cheese plate. Yeah. Because I need those
holes to like move it. I'm moving around or take
this off and, you know, me turn it this way, use it as a handle, You
know what I mean? So it's a very modular
system, like extremely
69. Advice From an Expert: Lens Specifics, Choice, and Advice: There's a lot of lenses
you can recommend people. It's just what it is is
what you can afford. It should always be that way. Like what you can
afford, you go for it. But if you want a
lens that can do it all is this lens.
You know what I mean? But if you already invested in full frame camera gear like
these hybrid shooters, then this won't be
an option for you. I mean, there is lenses
like Tamron that makes that are really good
that I've seen, but Cannon and Sony make
their own good, you know, zoom lenses like they're 24, 70 and stuff like that
and those are good, just overall, just
to get the job done. That's what I would
say, that regardless of what kind of Sony or
Cannon or Luminex, whatever it is,
you really want to have at least two main lenses. You want to have something
in the 16, 35 mill range. Right now, we're
shooting on 16 Mill. We can see the entire room, Louise and I, all the equipment. And then on this angle,
we're shooting on 50 Mill. This is giving a much
more telephoto feel. If you get a lens here and here, you're going to have basically 16 all the way up
to one oh five, Which is going to
get you through a lot of the scenarios
you're shooting. The way I see it is Get what? Like there's like a lot of
rental sites like Share grid. You know, I don't know if
your fans know about that or I mean your students in that room. So
I use share grid. And when share grid puts any of these lenses out
or a new thing or something, I like to try them out before
I buy or I buy them used. And the hardly buy new. I mean some people
like to buy new because they don't
want the damages. And the is something that, one thing you don't know
about zooms is that when you buy them
used or even new, sometimes they're slightly off. You won't notice it
to the first glance, but when you put it
on the computer, you'll notice that slide blur. Yeah, that just slide blur. And that was getting that on the 2470s for the
longest on Canon and Sony and all my buddies that
were hardcore pixel peepers. Yeah, they saw that. And then they actually had
a good copy of the 24, 70 and they showed
me the side by side. I'm like, damn, that
is a big issue. Is that something you
can fix by taking it to a shop you had to take it to Wherever
they get it fixed, and they will actually
realign it for you. I think I have that on one. Yeah. So like that's the
reason why I don't buy, I went with a 24 to one oh
five this time on a cannon. Because I saw this
on the original mark three EF version and
I really liked it. I was like, wow, it's already, it has stabilization built in. It's the 4.0 this is F four,
that's the only issue. But you give that for
the stabilization. I give that and it already
has great low light. So I don't really go higher
than what 64,000 or maybe. I mean, I never
even Dallas. Yeah. Those are numbers that
we never even wow, I don't even like going
above 3,200 on my mark tube. But that shot that you
saw, those were all, like, some of them were about 64
and up for the fashion. For the fashion, yeah. And then something with the
Mandy Moore, I just did. Yeah. Yeah, That was above that because there were
some shots where we try to use more ambulant than artificial light because
it was supposed to tell. We use lighting to
tell the story. Yeah. And so we didn't want the lighting to be too
flat and you know, so we used the dynamic range of this camera to push and pull. You know, honestly, like it all depends on
what you want to do. If you want to be a
beauty photographer, video guy or girl, you want like a macro lens or a zoom lens that can push and pull from here and here or get close eyeballs 'cause
these camera lenses, you cannot get close
to the eyeball. You wouldn't need a mackerel.
You know what I mean? Especially depending
on your client, You know, that's another thing. Yeah. So it all depends
on what you want to do. If you're going to be a wedding
or like a little family, indie filmmaker or
whatever, family. And the filmmaker, what is that somebody that wants to just shoot stories or like film
their own personal projects, But like wanted to get into advertising and then
get like a lens that does everything and
then rent everything out. You know what I mean?
But if you can't rent and you're in
a different country and stuff like that where
it's harder to rent like because there's not
sure grid everywhere. Then just try to find and invest on a lens
that does it all. You know what I mean? Or get these old vintage lenses too. Like this is an old ebay, contacts ice and I got this like years ago
for like 300 bucks. And do this lens still
still slops, right? Like when I can put this on this camera, I can
put this on this, I can put this on this
because it's a fool frame from 1980, somewhere in the 80s. And this class is so good. It's still good that is used for cinema, you
know what I mean? Or just indie films, you know. But that, that brings up
a good point too as well, that with the lens choice
that you're doing, you're going to see a lot
of different 16, 18 to 35. You're going to see
a lot of different 247024 to one oh five
for your camera. And there's going to be
a big price differences and the price that you're
paying is directly. Linked with the
quality of the glass. You know, a $200 there's
like the $200.50 millimeter, 1.8 maybe it's $100 The
50 mill the cannon, and then there's the 50 mill, 1.4 and then there's
the 50 mill, 1.2 And with each one, it's almost double
the price before. So it's like 100, 300 then like 1,200 or something like
this, 1,500 maybe. So what you're paying for? Yes, there's a slight increase
in the maximum aperture, meaning you're going to be
able to get more light. But what you're paying
for is the amount of time and energy that went into creating such high
quality glass. It creates sharpness
and clarity. And that is the look that
when you see much more high, highly produced
videos, you're like, wow, how does this
look so damn crisp? It's because they're
not shooting on a cheap kit lens that
has cheap glass. A click it Kant lens, Bls. Exactly. It's like if you have just your eyes and you're
seeing everything clearly and you put on opaque sunglasses and now things are a
little bit blurry. It takes a lot of work to get
all the impurities out of high quality glass to
remove those impurities. So it's something to think about is when you go about
lens purchases, you want, if you're
shooting action, if you're shooting
travel, blogs, and you want scenery
and landscapes and something that's more
fun and action oriented, wide angle, if you're
shooting more beauty blogger, if you're shooting
more short film, something more stylized, you want depth of field in
the background to be blurry, more telephoto or something. That'll get you in the 50 mill, 60 mill, 70 mill. But when you're making
those decisions also keep in mind there's going to
be different price ranges. And you want to pick something that's not going
to be the cheap, $100.24 to one oh five. Okay. You're gonna get what you pay for in
this area? Yeah. I mean, a lot of the
lenses when you buy now are like above 500. And the thing is you could, like I said, I bought this 50 mil for the
characteristics. Uh huh. Because the element, the
coating that was on here, when it flares, it flares beautifully. Same
thing with cannon. They flare blue beautifully. The z, I mean, the zest, sigma. Yeah. They flare a
little differently. More cold, I want to say. Yeah. But it has a weird 'cause
I've used plastic lenses, those cheap 50, 50s, the ones like you get for
like 100 bucks sewing cannon. Everyone has one of
those pancake lenses, like they're tiny as hell, but they're made out of plastic. And those have plastic glass. And you can tell right away when you hit, when you put
it against the sun, you'll see the flare
and you're like, oh, and it just looks bad on
the skin and all that. So that's what
you're paying for is that glass that's been refined to mimic light in such a beautiful way where
when it hits the sensor, it does it right for you. And it gives you that
sense of feeling like, wow, that's a beautiful
image. You know what I mean? And that's one thing
that I always look for. It's like everyone else
is trying to look for that perfect look,
that unicorn glass. You know what I mean? But it
does not exist. It's all. So the way I got to here was, and I still got more glass. I have the 70 to 200 cannon
and I have an old one. And I still use that
to this day because sometimes I got to like back
up and zoom in all the way. All the way to like
from here to here. Yeah. And it just looks
good because it's the compression of the
lens, that's another thing. And I will never, possibly ever use, like, wildlife lenses like
1,600 millimeters or 600. Those lenses is very specialty. I would only rent those.
I would never use it. So if you're a person that's a gearhead and just wants to
buy everything all at once, that's like the one
thing you should never do is buy it as you go. You know, everything here.
I bought it as I go. So I started here and went here, and then I went here, you know. But these two right now. And there was a lot of
iterations in me to eat. Oh yeah, there was a lot
of self selling, Sony. So have you seen me
with my Sony stuff? I used it but I never
used it for video. I just like the photos out of it and it's still
a great camera. Don't get me wrong,
Sony's don't, don't disappoint, You know, if you have a Sony
and a lot of people do it won't disappoint, just buy the right glass. I mean, you know, don't cheap out on your glass either and buy glass
that you know, That's one thing I
always tell you, buyer is always buy glass that's going to future proof
your next purchase. So that's why since I
already had cannon. Cannon. Cannon was Sigma,
but it's a cannon mount. I can transfer these
to this camera. And that's one thing I tell everybody is like
if you're gonna buy a rebel or whatever or one
of these, what is it called? Micro four, three lenses. You can't transfer these to
any of the bigger cameras. So if you're starting
off with a 300, $400 camera or $500 like like the 6,500 like those
little pointy shoes, but they have really
good quality stuff. You can't transfer
that to the next one. And that's one thing that every person that calls
me and tells me, hey, what do you think I
should get Da, Da, Da. I mean, I started with a rebel. I started with like,
what do you have? Like oh, I have
those old cheap 14th to 13 cannon or whatever. You can't transfer those like you have to sell the whole gear. And that's one thing
you should never do is like get the
glass that you like and then use that and utilize that. So you
know what I mean? And then if you get tired
of it then, I mean, I'm pretty sure by then you'll be shooting Hollywood films, you know, because it's
all practice, honestly. All this is just learning your style and learning
how well you work with it. And then that's how
you were able to determine where you want to go in filmmaking or photography. You know, that's a good point. You want to really when you
are making your purchases, you want to be able
to have longevity. If you buy some of
these cheaper lenses, when you want to upgrade your camera two years
later, a year later, you're stuck with
these old lenses that don't really transition as your creativity and
your skill set grows. You want to try and set up that your equipment is going
to grow with you. So that's just a really
good point equipment wise.
70. Advice From an Expert: Motivation Progress and Success as a Video Creator: We kind of went over all the different specifics about gear, different entry level
pieces of equipment, and more expensive
pieces of equipment. Microphones, as you can see. And I just kind
of wanted to chat maybe a little bit
about, you know, recommendations that
you would have for new video creators or you know, words of wisdom, just
keep creating honestly, Like don't learn all
this technical stuff. And like, if you don't have
the money to do any of it, I would say just get what you
have or find a way to get what the camera you
want or however you want to do it and
just create honestly. That's the only thing I'm
gonna tell you because I've seen people
create off of iphones and create masterpieces and
little cameras like this. And still to this day, I see people rock
little cameras and still create really great
content. You know what I mean? It's just one thing you should always do and
this is something that I have to catch myself
a couple of times is just keep loving to, I mean, just be grateful
that you're able to do this. Because in some places if you can't, you
know what I mean? And one thing that I tell
myself a lot of times is like, all right, you know, I'm not happy with where I'm at, okay? Let's try to motivate myself
to do something else, a project or a personal project. Because sometimes
getting all this work, I get a lot of work on a weekly. And once that happens
I'll just be like, okay, I need to step, step back, enjoy time with
family or something, or pick up a hobby, a second hobby that's
not related to this. And that's happened
to helping me mentally because mental
health is a huge thing. And honestly in this industry, you can get stuck in the
nitty video of all that. But one thing that
I can tell anybody, and I've told my interns
and my assistants, is that always keep creating. And if you'd like something that you like from
another creator, just do it because
that's practice for you. And don't worry about
failing either. I failed so many times where
I've gotten yelled at, I've messed up a whole job. But I learned from those lessons and I use that for the next job. You know what I mean? Like okay, I know like
not to do this or I'll practice this and I
watched a ton of Youtube. But back in our day
we didn't have, back in our day we
didn't have Youtube. And, and like that was kind of a hard thing and I
had to learn everything in college and people and so it
was a different time then. But now like there's so much information
that like honestly, like what you're
doing is so awesome. Because I wish I had that when I was younger
and doing this. But at the same time, like I'm grateful
for what I know and that I got to learn so much. That I was even given the
opportunity to meet people like you and assist. A lot of, one thing I still
do to this day and a lot of people don't know is I
assist a lot of people. And what I mean by
assist is like, oh, what do you need serve,
like you need lenses. Like I set up the cameras and I do
digit teching and stuff. And why I do it is
because I get to learn different new ways of like
people's style and stuff. And I don't try to
steal from them, I just like to learn from like how are they getting
these shots or like because everyone
has a different style. And that's awesome about being a creator is
that you're able to, you utilize the technology
that we have now, which we have a crap load of
like technology right now, that there's no reason
not to be able to create. That's one thing that I
can tell you right now is that if the world were to end and all you
had is your iphone. I'm pretty sure I'm going to
be able to do commercials off of this in the
desert or whatever, you know, like
everything's done. But just create. And don't, don't let
it hold you back from, don't discourage yourself. You know, always try
to push yourself and if you know somebody that's a creator in your town or whatever
I would say, ask him if you want
to help him out. I mean, like I have a good story about one
girl, Emmilyn Rose. She was a 14 year old,
15 year old girl. When I was 18, I was just starting
photography. I was in college. She wrote me an e mail
because she saw me on set doing lifestyle
and she said, I want to be a photographer
and I just want to go at it Just because she
sent me that e mail, I took her in and and I
was learning at the time, so I thought I was like, ****, I got an assistant, you know. But at the same time, she
she worked her *** off to the point where now she has her own three
studios in downtown LA. She's running her own
company now she's starting a little agency like
she's really killing end. Yeah. And she's
producing and all that. Like this girl eats and sleep photography and now she's
producing and directing. Yeah. And I give it up
to her like honestly, like there's times I'm like damn like you're
just going too hard. And but then I'm
like, you know what, That's what you got to do is
you just got to like want it till you become
living off of it. And that's what
she did 100% Yeah. Thank you for sharing
that. And like I fully can second that. As well as the largest client I actually got for the past
seven years was because I showed up to an event 'cause I was
so hungry to just film. And it was something simple. It was like going to film
some night life thing. And I was supposed to get
paid like 50 or 100 bucks. Yeah. Legitimately,
I never got paid. But I met someone there that led me to this,
that led me to that, that led me to my
largest paying client for seven whole years. And so it was really the desire and also
getting my hands dirty. And like Luis is
saying, just creating, just getting into it, not
letting this hold you down, letting these be a tool that you get really comfortable
with so you can translate your idea into
something that you're proud of. And that comes from failing. That comes from saying yes to as many projects as you can. That comes from not getting
hung up on equipment, but really getting out
there and collaborating, meeting people, and creating
as much as you can. So that's one thing I would say is just
like always try to collaborate and just be
hungry for it, you know. And then you, all that knowledge is just going to
pay off, you know? And it's paying
me off, honestly, just being hungry for it's been like, you
know what I mean? Just be creative. You know,
just find your own style too. You know, find your own
style and upgrade as you go. You start here, you
build your equipment, gets better, your
creativity gets better, your skill set gets better, your client level and your
final product get much better. And it's a process. And with all that said,
that wraps it up for this learning lesson where
Louise and I dove in really deep into
cinematography tips and tricks and also a lot
about the equipment side. So, thank you for coming
on. Thank you for students and I will see you guys in the next
learning lesson. Oh boy Al, right.
71. Better Looking Laptop Videos: Now, because of the situation of what the whole earth is going through with this
whole covid thing and so many people are
using their laptops. I wanted to kind of add a
little bit of a bonus lecture around getting a better looking
video with your laptop. Whether that's a zoom call, a face time, Google Hangout, Skype session with clients, with friends, with
family, whatever it is. I'm going to give you
some principles that you can use that
from here on out. After this course, all of your laptop videos are
going to look way better. So let's first start with
me sitting down here, Okay. Now the reason I'm going to face this way is because there's already decent light coming
from this main light source, which is this window that's
directly across from me. Now with video on your laptop, it's really similar to
your phone in general, where you want to have things as close to eye
level as possible. This is honestly a little
bit low for my liking. It should probably be
something like that. You can that this feels a lot
more presentable than this. This is a lot more casual, you're not really setting
thing, else, things up. If this is you and your
family, that's totally fine. I want to get this a
little bit higher. So I'm just going to grab a prop in the house that
I can easily use. Now, this is not a step that all people should need to take, but this is just a
little extra step that whether you're doing this professionally or with
friends and family, this will give you slightly better looking image
on your laptop. So the next thing that I
want to do is because I already have a decent
main lighting source, I want to get the exposure down behind me because
this is all blown out and the image is very grainy in the darks and around
around the frame. Something you really have
to keep in mind with laptop videos when you're
streaming or doing one of these zoom calls is that you don't
have the type of quality to work with that you have on a DSLR or more
professional camera, or even the iphone quality
is going to do so much more. So you really have to take a few extra steps to
make this look good, which the next step
is going to be getting the exposure
behind me down. So let's see what that
looks like, okay? And you can see that it's
a lot cleaner of an image. So if you go to the
before and the after, so you can see pretty
well lit, of course. It's a little bit grainy. There's not much we
can do about that. It comes down to the quality
of the camera on our laptop, which the quality is not
that good most of the time. One last thing that
I wanted to actually add that we have
available in this kind of situation is adding practical
lights in the background. Like you probably already
know by now in this course, this is one of my
favorite things. So this is an okay looking
image, a little bit dull, but we're going to really
make things look a lot more stylized by adding on these practical string
lights in the background. Let's see what that looks
like. I love these lights. Oh, as you can see, a lot better looking
of an image. Now, something to
keep in mind before I wrap up this lecture is the video or the camera inside the laptop is
always recording on auto, so it's kind of getting confused by these lights
in the background. And I can see the exposure
kind of changing. So, stylistically it
looks really nice, but it's also, yeah, there's a, there's a lot of ISO
kind of issues and some digital noise
going on and whatnot, but this is just a
little extra step for your laptop videos.
72. Advice From an Expert: Vlatz Introduction and Camera Talk: So at this portion
of the course, it's a little bit
of a bonus session and lecture that I
wanted to have a really cool sit down discussion with a really good filmmaker
friend of mine lats, he, Julian, Thank you for
having me then, of course. So kind of today we're
going to be touching on, you know, the real life
experience of a filmmaker. I really want Vlaz
to be able to share his story and offer advice, inspiration, motivation, and really just
any other kind of information that he wants
to share with you guys. After going through the course and getting all
these techniques on upgrading your cinematography
and creating better videos, I want to have someone else
who's also been doing this as a freelancer and
works full time as a filmmaking filmmaker to
share his perspective. So as I just kind of want
to start with, you know, maybe just a short
little backstory on what got you to today. Sure. I'm from Colombia, so I was born in Bogota. And I remember the first time I started messing with video, it was doing stuff on
Windows Movie Maker, actually just for fun, grabbing like different
footage and making those awful like texts on screen with the fonts that
they have in Windows. And just having fun with it, like getting creative
the same way like DJ, started making mixes
in tapes from radio. That's kind of the approach, like the to approach that I did, like just grabbing
Windows movie maker. Then I remember I went
to Miami to visit an aunt and she had like a video recorder
super old school. And I just wanted to like put my hands on it and
see how it works. I was always fascinated by it. And I remember I loved
just to put it on check, like this little screen, the little red.it felt cool. I don't know, There's
something about it that's always been present in like since
I was a little kid. And then Youtube came
and in Colombia, like Youtube, like
everything gets so late, the huge Youtubers
were not in Colombia, but like in different countries, I always felt like I
wanted to be on Youtube, but I didn't know how
everything was in English. There were no content
creators teaching in Spanish. So that was a huge difference in like being here in the states where you had like
a lot of academies, a lot of content teachers. That didn't happen in
Colombia or in Latin America. So everything was
like try and error. So I had like five
Youtube channels. I bought a Go Pro
like three or two. It was an old one and I
started messing with it. I downloaded Premier Pro starting like getting
to know the software, and I started doing mode logs in my motorcycle with
a lavalier mic. It didn't work, so I had to learn how to make the
audio kind of better. And then I bought a cannon. 60, started messing with it. It was so much fun taking everything that
camera has to offer. And if you look at it right now, it's like so obsolete for video. It's like the quality is bad, the sound is awful. But it was the best camera that I could have afforded
right there. That knowledge. Then coming
here to Los Angeles, having the opportunity to take knowledge from
the Youtube teachers. But like in English, that's a completely
different step because it's like people are doing it here and there's a lot of good
teachers everywhere. That's something
I'm so grateful. And I met a really, really cool guy, Julian. You taught me so much not only like about cameras gear editing, but like perspective of how to even deal with
filmmaking situations. That's something you don't
get to learn online. That's something you
get like from out human to human and
experience in doing it. And that's something
that I still appreciate. And it's with me and it's
going to be with me forever. And it means a lot. Yeah, thank you, man. Thank
you for sharing that. And thank you for
Yeah, of course. Those like kind words but
also your back story. Some of that stuff,
I didn't even really realize the difference between. Yeah, sometimes where you're living creates certain scenario. So that's yeah, I think a lot of the times we
forget these things, especially with
the Internet too. It is an interesting kind
of tool that we can use. But I also wanted to
kind of touch in on So you moved to America. Now you're working with
pretty high end client full time making good money, creating content on a monthly. Monthly basis.
You're putting out how many videos a month
for this client. Crazy. It's from little videos for Instagram to serious
podcast series DJ routines. It's more than 30. Definitely. Damn. Okay. And so
what are some of the tactics or tips or just maybe some things
you picked up along the way, cinematography or filming wise, that you know now that maybe
you didn't know a month ago, three months ago,
three years ago. Anything you want
to share out that? Yeah, So I sucked so much
doing like hand held kind of footage and my videos were so boring because
of the framing. So I wished I knew small things
like you taught me once, like the ninja movement
of how you don't. It's more interesting
to have a video or like a short
video of you have the subject and if you do it super slow and it's like
a two second fragment, it looks way more
interesting if you put the little
effort of moving it, trying to make it
like closer taking. Not only filming
from one angle only, but like trying to get the other one like the
opposite side. It's those little
details that at the end the sum and they
make it way, way better. And you have more
footage to choose from being able to have more ball because you're not
lazy and you're like, okay, you have to
get this angle, I have to get that frame. I'm going to try it from above, I'm going to try it
parallel 90 degrees. I'm this thinking of
having the checklist, that's another thing
that you taught me. Like having checklist to
do that and don't forget. So at the end of the
day, you have a bunch of footage to choose from that's huge and that makes a huge
difference, 100% Yeah. My checklists are just, they've grown over the years. I was talking with
Louise yesterday about it just like
he saw my checklist. He's like, Bro, what
is that I'm like, this is how I get things done. If I don't get it written
down, it's not getting done. So that's huge for me, and I'm glad that
you brought that up, because I think it's
those little kind of structured elements that really make the shooting
process better. And if the shootings,
well, let me back that up. If the pre production
structuring process is better, the shooting process is better, which makes the editing
process better, which makes the final product
and the audience retention and the interest in the
video and the click through whatever it
is. So much better.
73. Advice From an Expert: Equipment vs. Skill and Maximizing What You Have: So I also wanted to touch on
what do you think has been. What would you tell yourself? Filming wise or maybe camera
wise or equipment wise, three years ago that you know, today like lats, three year old lats don't
stress on the equipment or, you know, maybe step this up or what do you
think that would be? I remember thinking that
if I had a better camera, I could be a better film
maker and that's not true. Like your cell phone is a super powerful
machine to record video. You have slow motion, you have HD video. You have a lot of tools
there at your hand. Right now, that belief of
like this is not enough. I wish I could have switched it to how can I take the
most out of what I have. That's one of the things I would have told myself
three years ago. Gear. I mean, obviously
if you have a red camera, you can get different kind of results and better results
for certain situations. But having the ability to take the most out of
what you have right now, that's an important
way of thinking, especially when you're starting. I remember taking the
most out of my 60. It wasn't because I was having the mindset
of taking it to the most 100% percentage, 100% of the camera. It was here after having it for five years that I
took the time to. Okay. I'm going to
check on Youtube. What are the best settings? And I actually was getting better footage
after having it for a long time than when I just got it when I
was back in Colombia. And that's crazy if
you think about it. If it happened to me, that can happen to
a lot of people. You might have a
really good camera, but you're not taking
the most out of it because you're not
reading the manuals, you're not looking on Youtube tutorials on how
to set it up correctly. I wasn't taking
into consideration the frame rate like the
24 frames per second. I was shooting 60 sometimes
and it looks so bad, and that's pretty much it sums, and that's the result of doing the hard work and doing the
homework of researching. And that's so important. I wish I would have taken more time into educating myself. I would be so far a better filmmaker right
now if I would have taken the time and the money
to invest in education. That's the only way to
get better in filmmaking. I love that because what I
hear when you're saying that is I don't want to use
the word mastering, but getting really comfortable with the fundamentals, right? The fundamentals, there's only so many variables
on a camera, there's only so
many ways you can move the camera,
set up the camera, like we talked about
in the course, Tripod shot, gimble
shot, handheld shot, There's only a handful of different parameters for
all these different things. Of course, there's complex
different additions of equipment and settings
and all these things, but it comes down to mastering
the fundamentals as if you are a painter that knows the paint brush really well and understands the coloring
really well and the canvas really well and then creates all these different
landscapes and different types of art. That is really a big part, you know, is really
those fundamental areas. What do you think was that? Because it can be
easy to say like don't worry about the
equipment as much. I love what you're saying
about maximizing what you do have 'cause it's a
totally different mindset. I want that or how
do I make what I do have actually better
or the best it could be. So you're going
into research mode, you're going into experiential
mode, making mistakes. What was the shift that made you able to integrate that
truth versus just say, don't worry about the
equipment 'cause I think some times
even when I hear it, I'm like, yeah, but it yeah, no. But what was that shift for
you that now you would say? I wish I could tell
myself three years ago. This is the realization. I think at the end of the day, it comes down to results. Like I know people who invest in really expensive cameras
and they don't use them, they don't utilize all the
tools that come with it. It comes for me how
bad you want it. For example, just to take
an example, Instagram, you can make so many good videos with just your cell
phone or Tiktok. You can make the best content, pretty much with any
cell phone right now. It comes down to creativity,
to what you have here. Camera gear like tripods, lights a better lens. That's a plus, That's a tool
that you have and it's cool. I mean, I wish I could
have like the best camera, the most expensive one, the best lens, like
R cinema cameras. But at the end of the day, this is what you have here
is what translates into making the bridge to build that dream that you have
and make it come true. Eventually you'll
have those cameras, you'll have those lenses, but it has to be a process
and you appreciate everything more when
it costs effort. And you have to go
through the phases of, okay, I don't have that camera. I have this right now. What can I make out of this? People, even if you think they don't notice or
they're not watching, people can tell if you
are a creative person. There are so many examples
of that on Youtube, on the Internet of
people like retweeting. They think is that one video can change your
life and probably that one video was more
creative than gear based. Have that in mind.
One thing that I, I think it's amazing
about the creative world, taking music into
consideration and filmmaking is that
you can try 99 times. Those 99 tries can be awful. Awful songs or awful videos. But video, one piece of content, like one song or
one Youtube video, or one Tiktok or one Instagram video,
can change your life. Sometimes it doesn't come down to what camera
you're using, what super expensive
lens you're using, Crazy light and sounding, and software, and et cetera. It comes down to the
creative ability that you have to put what you have in your mind to reality. That's crazy. It only takes one piece of content
to change your life.
74. Advice From an Expert: Video Progress and Giving It Your All: What are, you know, some of the habits, routines maybe that
you do to really work on this creative muscle to
make you a better filmmaker. Or that's maybe brought you the business success
that you have today. How do you know where do
you want to take that? Yeah, I'm always checking
on all platforms. I'm following the
video creators that I like and I try to
take all the tricks. Because there are no
tricks. It's just have it. For example, there's one
dude on the Instagram, he used to do the
sickest stories. Uh huh. With handheld transitions. And he put the transitions and then he explained
every day how he did it. And it's no crazy editing, it was just his cell phone. And he was doing the transitions
like handheld and pretty much came down to the ability
to do everything on set. Not so much focused
on the editing like post crazy CGI staff, no. It was pretty much just thinking ahead of what you're going to shoot and something so simple, like an Instagram story, but making it the best. I was like, wow, for Instagram
stories which are like, you don't see them
after 24 hours, the amount of work that you're
putting is not going to be able to perpetuate
after 24 hours. That's huge. I mean, if
somebody is working so hard, I was like, okay, okay, okay. That I like that
way of thinking. What if I put the
same amount of effort in every piece of
content I make? It doesn't matter
if it's editing, but if it's a 15 second clip, what's the best I can
bring to it before, during, and after the shooting? That helped me a lot like
to take that approach of, okay, let's make it better
every time. What can I add? How can I make it 1% better than the video I edited or the video I should
before? Mm hm. That's a huge, I like that
perspective because, yeah, I feel like when I stopped
trying to make, well, it's kind of interesting when I stopped trying to make
this next project, the masterpiece, even though I was pouring all
my energy into it. When I started to release more content on a
more frequent basis. But try to more improve
versus this is going to be the video that
I'm the most proud of and that is this and
that and this and that, that would keep me stuck
in the creative process. Expectation, the
expectation, and really the perfectionism
of editing maybe a video two weeks a week longer than I, than needed. But really making this one
is 2% better, 2% better, 2% than trying to
make this final one, that somehow I arrive at this amazing video creating
arrival or completion. And just kind of letting
go of that need. Yeah. And that desire, but really keeping
track of progress and wanting to make it more interesting as I go
and try new things. And yeah, really
pouring myself into it, but it's something
to think about, is pouring yourself into your
project in a balanced way, whether that's you
filming on set or you coming up with your ideas. Yeah. Giving you your energy. But don't think that this is, that this is the destination. I think that's what I'm
trying to say here. The destination is
far in the future. Let that be the video that
you're working on now is the next step of
something that you don't know possibly
where it's leading, but you're going in a direction. So I think that that's
when you were saying that, that was bringing
that memory up in me, that kind of was a good shift
for me as well to kind of really change gears and be more creative and
have more output. There was a video. No, no, no. I was filming and
DJ Jazzy Jeff and he's just like full
of frigging wisdom and everything he says
just sounds so epic. And he said, you
need to die empty. And when I heard that,
I was kind of like, whoa, that sounds kind of harsh. What he was saying
is, you don't want to die with anything left
in the tank, you know? You don't want to die with anything left on the hard drive. You don't want to
be a musician or a filmmaker with all
these projects stuck on your laptop and stuck
on your hard drive that doesn't get
released because it's not perfect or good enough. You want to blow through
all that stuff and get it out and put it in the
world and shoot and edit, and create it, and go die
empty. Die with it all out. On in the planet, you
know what I mean? And that kind of connected with a few other realizations and
was a really big, I think, milestone in a
stepping point for my personal filmmaking
creation process. One of the things
that I realized is that you don't
think about it, but like every successful Youtuber or video
creator or artist, they start from zero. Mm hm. They just press
record and put it online. The first video, for the most
part probably will suck. Or the first movie or the first documentary that you make, it's probably going to suck. But like if you
keep working on it, when you have 25 videos, 50, when you put on the work
and you get to 100 videos, that one probably is going
to look a lot better. Because you've put on the hours, people are going to follow
and come to your channel. Eventually, opportunities
are going to come and collaborations
are going to open. Because you have a portfolio and you've got the experience. That's something
that's hard to do. Because usually perfection is not something people are like having in mind when
they're doing things, but that's hiding
something else. It's like the insecurity of what people are
going to think of. If I have put this video
online, it's not perfect. I could have done this and that. But at the end of the day, people are not going to
care for your first video, even if it's super perfect. Eventually there are
some weird cases where people blow out
from first videos. But you have to work
and it's a process. It's not a one video
kind of staff. It's a process. And when you think and
when you do it from that perspective and you're
playing on the long run, you enjoy it, you
enjoy it way more, and you start like having fun. You know, I love basically
the advice you gave. It wasn't on the technical side, it was much more
on the human side. I love that because
I think, you know, we can go on those Youtube rabbit holes where
we're just going on these technical video
tutorials and not really taking a look back and seeing the bigger
picture of okay, am I being joyful
while I'm creating? Am I balancing my
desire to shoot videos with my joy and not burning myself out and actually as
smiling during the process. So I love the fact
that you brought up that side of filmmaking
'cause I don't think that's talked
about a whole lot. But with that said, is
there any other kind of words of wisdom that you would like to impart? Definitely. Ah, you just need to
pray the record button. That's the most important
step. You just have to start. After you start,
you've done the step. The hardest step in filmmaking
is starting to shoot. To press the record button on your camera or
your cell phone. I love that. Oh man, I think I'm gonna
get that tattooed. I'm like, I love that. Well, thank you so
much, Blatz for sharing with you and yeah, I'm really looking forward to shooting more and
continuing this process. So, thanks for being on,
thank you for having me. I hope to see you soon
man. Alright, thanks man. Perfect.
75. Course Recap and My Creative Challenge For You: And so this is it, the final chapter
of this chorus. I'm so happy that you made
it this far and just, wow, I can't believe this is it. Like I put so much
energy and so much time, and just so much of
myself into this project, into this information,
into the pre production, the production, the
post production of getting this content to you. And I'm so excited
that you made it this far and that you now have all of the knowledge that I know that now you have to
create what you want. So what we're going to
be doing is recapping the information that
we've gone over before getting into the
bonus section of the course. Now I can't recap everything, but there's just a few key reminders that
I want to give you. And we're going to
do an overview. If I recapped everything, this would be a
very long lecture, so let's check it out. First, we dove into
our camera settings. We started off by really
getting onset experience, seeing how things work
behind the scenes. And then seeing how we can
use our cameras settings and functions to really get the best looking and sounding footage
and audio as possible. Then we got into the
film techniques. We worked with Kimber Lea
And we got to see how to get the best looking and
sounding video in natural light, in artificial light, with all the different
lighting scenarios and all the different types of
environments to shoot it. We went over a bunch of other really important and
essential film techniques and applied those techniques into the hands on
learning exercises. And you got to upload
your before and after shots and shared them
in the Q and A section. That's when most people would be done and satisfied
with their video. But we took things even further. We dove into audio and B
role, using cutaway shots, using all the different
kinds of framing, shot types, camera movement,
creating a montage. Carving out your story by adding in a lot
of cutaway shots, putting your ideas
into a shotlist, and getting crystal
clear sounding audio. Then we synthesized
all that information, all the audio, all
the video techniques, and gathered them together
so that now you have all the tools that you need to continue to
go out and create, to take your ideas
and turn them into videos that you are proud of. Ooh. And now that
we've gotten this far, I now have a challenge
for you is for you to take all of these techniques and really, really apply them. I don't want you to be excited and having fun
during this course. Well, I do want that,
but I want you to continue to expand on that excitement and
that information and that new knowledge
beyond this course. So I want you to take the
camera settings using proper exposure and settings
for your environment. The framing, the creative
use of framing with the specific purpose
in mind of what the emotion is that you want
to create in your audience. Using focus, right? Guiding the viewer's eye to where your story
is being told. Using great
background choice for your specific video to create a specific vibe.
And using movement. One of my favorite parts, creating the right feeling with consciously
moving your shots and using those
different shots as a good mix of different
types of framing. Blending those different ideas together to get really good, different types of roll
coverage and B roll coverage. And of course, using
great lighting. And lastly, sound. Getting clean and
crispy quality sound from your subject or
your environment. And I want you to take these ideas and
continue to create, but specifically
create a new series or a big video project. So take these ideas and take
these techniques that you learned and really step
out of your comfort zone. Create something unique,
create something that is uniquely you and uniquely yours. And the other courses in this
series will help you with coming up with that idea
or editing that video, or really going out and
creating that series. So I'll give the details to that as well in the
final bonus lesson. But most importantly,
be sure to share your progress with me on Instagram and in
the Q and A section. Nothing makes me well.
I really love coffee. It makes me pretty happy.
But mostly nothing makes me as happy as seeing
your upgraded footage, your upgraded shots,
your new projects. And I love when you
keep me updated on, you know, the stuff that you create after you
take the courses. So be sure to tag
me on Instagram. Be sure to keep me in
the loop and be sure to really show me what you
do after this course. And so we're nearing
the end here. I'm sad, but I'm excited
for you as well. But in the next
learning lessons, I'm going to give some
special bonus giveaways for you making it all the
way through the course. Specifically, it's
going to include some techniques for
shooting on your laptop. Some expert advice from a
filmmaker friend of mine. And links, like I mentioned, to my other courses that are
connected to this course. So enjoy and always
keep creating. Always keep growing. Always keep moving forward. Always keep following
your passion. Thank you so much for going on this journey with
me, for listening, for taking in what I'm offering, and really allowing this
connection to happen. And I truly, truly
am grateful for you, and I'm so excited that you are now a graduate
of this chorus. Thank you.