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Browsing Posts tagged camcorder

Holy crap! This post took me a long time to get ready for you– my valued students.  No need to fret, however.  After watching this, you’ll see…

• The 4 types of recording media
• The Pros and Cons of each
• How to make an informed camcorder purchase

Now go out there, and make your old teacher proud!

The Holiday season has officially begun,

but you must see this before you lay down your cool cash for those hot camcorder deals out there.

  • Did you know  there are 3 different categories of camcorders?
  • Can you tell me  the biggest thing to consider when looking for your next camcorder?
  • Any idea why I’m grilling you like this?
This is Part 1 of 3 episodes that will help answer all these questions- and more!

There’s been a bumper crop of new camcorders that fit in your pocket.

I’ll give you the skinny on these new slim cams.

Your Camcorder needs to talk with you.

In this very special episode of CHM, learn what your camera would tell you if it could talk.

  • Like people, your camera gear has secret desires and special needs.

File this one under: Obvious

To make awesome home movies, you need to take your camera out of the closet.

  • How many times have you seen something really cool, and you wished that you had your camcorder?

Say you went out for a beer at the Las Vegas Lounge in Philadelphia.  You order a Miller Chill with lime, and then you see Danny Bonaduce walk in wearing an Evil Knievel costume.  Then, he challenges you to a thumb war.

continue reading…

What’s one way to INSTANTLY improve the way your videos look?My Road Map (Yours May Vary)

Make sure there’s enough light on your subjects.

Many camera manufacturers claim that their camcorders perform well in low light.

Don’t let your camera’s tech specs fool you into ignoring your environments lighting.

If you’re shooting inside, and it’s dark, then you should try to light your scene.

I bought an inexpensive work light at the Home Depot to handle this task.

continue reading…

Ensure your audience a great viewing experience!

My Road Map (Yours May Vary)We all know that watching a video shot using poor camera work is hard to watch.

You know it.  I know it.  Your father-in-law… needs to read this.

As you recall, telling a story is the most important thing to do when making a video.

The next most critical thing is to use good, solid, time-tested camera techniques.

If the mere mention of watching your videos make people scatter like cock roaches in light, you may suffer from what I call HMD.


6 Easy ways to practice good camera technique

  1. Hold your camera steady while shooting - Keep your elbows close to your body.
  2. Don’t pan and tilt all the darn time!! - There’s nothing wrong with slowly panning across your scene… once.  After you get your wide sweeping (slow) pan, then concentrate on tighter, and again, steady shots.
  3. Hold your Shot – Hold your shots for at least 5 seconds.  I usually shoot between 8 and 15 second long clips.
  4. Frame your Shots – Try to make the things your shooting look nice in the image frame.
  5. Get Close Ups – Your viewers want to see the details of the who and what your showing them.
  6. Get Sound – If it’s a video of your kids, your audience WANTS to hear them SAY cute things.  If it’s a video of your friends, then you want to HEAR them say something clever or funny.
    • To get any decent audio of your subjects’ speech, your camera will have to be within 4 feet of the person speaking.  (Unless you have a shotgun mic or a lavaliere mic.)

Stay tuned, class, for more detailed discussions of all of the above!

Never let your recording media get the best of you.

Wrangle your home movie acquisition media before it gets out of control.

Most camcorders- even the least expensive ones- seem to be shipping with on board digital effects these days.

I have some great advice for using those in your own home movies.

Don’t use Digital Effects.  They’re not cool.

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camcorder_hdv_smallProblem: Your camcorder reset its time counter to 00:00:00

even though you know you had many minutes of video already recorded to tape.

WHY DID THIS HAPPEN TO YOU:

You most likely (or maybe it was your friend; why do I always blame you?) switched to playback mode on your camcorder to review some of your footage.  Then, when you were done, you cued the tape back up to approximately where you left off on the tape.

You (or your buddy) thought you were at the end of the last scene, but you actually cued the tape forward just a little too far. (Usually the screen turns solid blue when it runs past the end of picture)

Once cued past the tape’s data, the camera will assume that it to prepare a new tape for recording.  Then, it correctly starts back at time 00:00:00

Solution: Cue your tape to about a second BEFORE the last scene is over on your tape.

Super Solution: Really plan ahead here, and roll each shot about 3 seconds longer than you think you need to.  It’s a good habit to get into- so that you have plenty of extra data on the tape for the camcorder to be able to read when you are cuing the tape.