justfindarticles.com justfindarticles.com
Main Page -> About Us -> Add Url -> Privacy of Info -> Terms & Conditions -> Add Your Article
Search:   
 

311 Concert Tickets

311 Concert Tickets (24/07/2006) - Jacob Tapistry
 

Give new life to your living room

Painting Books has all types of various medium for doing decorative tole painting is wood, fabric, c ... - Anna Josephs
 

New iPod Accessories

With the ever-increasing popularity of the iPod and all its various forms, it follows that more and ... - Jason Hahn
 
 

Want To Be An eBay Millionaire? Have You Got What It Takes?

Can you live the dream and work from home making a full time living as an eBay seller? - Darren Yates
 

Ebay Revenue

I am going to show how to make revenue with ebay products. - Shola Rahman
 

How To Tips On Buying On Ebay

Buying things on eBay can be a great alternative for out-door shopping. Shopping on eBay gives the b ... - 123456789
 

Comparing Digital Camera Features

More people are able to afford digital cameras because their prices are falling but the number of ch ... - Steve Gargin
 

The Sucessful Studio Singer

After singing on countless sessions including commercials, backup for many an artist and for an arra ... - Tom Gauger
 
 

Main Page » Art & Creative » Camera Photography
 

Avoid These Five Shooting Mistakes

 
Author: Tyler Ellison
The difference between professional and amateur video work is obvious to audiences but is not always so obvious behind the camera. With so many things to consider, it's easy to overlook something while shooting that may be irreparable later. Your audience will know if the shoot was handled well or not by how they react to the images you present. Professionals have often
learned by hard experience the consequences of failing to plan against the following five mistakes:

1. Bad framing. Nobody likes to see an actor whose head is cut off by the top of the video frame, but even fewer people like to see an actor with his chin cut off at the bottom. It's important to maintain good balance in the composition of the shot, but the somewhat experienced amateur tends to go to the other extreme by putting all the subjects smack in the center of the frame. That gets boring and the audience will see everything objectively. The professional follows the rule of thirds, keeping the subjects on the lines that divide the frame into thirds, keeping eyes on the top third and movement on the third opposite of the direction in which the subject is moving in order to keep open space in front. While this may seem simple, it is not as easy as it appears once the action begins. Practice following the rule of thirds and you will be able to keep your subjects interesting to watch.

2. Too much zooming. Most consumer grade camcorders have few effects built in but all of them have zooms so many amateurs tend to overuse it. If you pay attention to most of the stuff you see in films or television, the actual zooming is not commonly displayed. Home videos, however, are deeply infected with over zealous zooming and it weakens the production. Picture quality and audience interest remains when you track the camera in for a closer view instead of constantly zooming. The wide shot keeps the highest picture quality so try to use that whenever you can.

3. Backlighting. The amateur videographer is 99% ignorant of how light affects the appearance of the subject on the screen. So much amateur video is so fraught with black figures with dark faces by windows or in front of the sunlight. A word to the wise: keep the strongest light source in front of your actor or subject for the best video quality. Photographers have a flash so they can mix it up but video isn't served by having backgrounds that are brighter than the subject. When forced to video a backlit subject, increase the exposure to totally blow out the background. Better to have a clear face and nothing in the background than a beautiful background with a dark subject.

4. Background noise. Camcorders com with omnidirectional microphones built in but many videographers continue to shoot as if the sound from the front is the only audio that the camera will pick up. What they fail to consider is the fact that the microphone is picking up the planes overhead, the trucks on the nearby highway, the children playing nearby, and the wind. Cut out all the background noise you can before you start rolling tape because once that audio is recorded, you may not be able to clean it up in post production.

5. No tripod. Please, just use it. Get one with quick release plates so it doesn't slow you down much when you need to hold the camera but no human arm or shoulder will ever be able to compete with the steady, dependable, and strong shots that come from using a tripod. Videographers are cocky and think they can handle it with their hands. They obviously have never participated in the production of a major motion picture. The cinematographer never holds the camera himself, he's not so incompetent as to think he can get consistent quality shots with his own arm.

Avoid these mistakes and your audiences will love you for it.

Author Bio:

Tyler Ellison is affiliated with utah wedding videographers through Ellison Video Productions.

You can search for this article using: Avoid These Five Shooting Mistakes, Art & Creative, Camera Photography, photography art
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Navigating the Amazon Sales Ranking
 
This is Swingthing
 
Piano?A World Of History And Class
 
How To Click It Right With The Best Digital Photography Camera
 
P2P File-Sharing: Evaluate the Risks
 
Understanding and using auto bracketing
 
Ebay Sellers: Shopping On Black Friday Will Make You Thousands
 
7 Secrets For Beating Writer??s Block
 
A Multi-platinum Success Story
 
Aztec Baby and Scorpion Fetus
 
 
 
Get Free Links
 
   

Finance & Investment

   

Research & Science

   

Academics & Learning

   

Indoor Games

   

Recreation

   

Adventure & Sports

   

Policies & Law

   

Automotive

   

Teens & Kids

   

Garden & Home

   

Software & Networking

   

Issues & News

   

Medicine & Treatment

   

Lifestyle & Fashion

   

Realty & Property

   

Eating & Drinking

   

Health & Therapy

   

Companies & Business

   

Jobs & Employment

   

Society & Issues

   

Self Enhancement

   

Malls & Shopping

   

Art & Creative

   

Tour & Travel

 
Main Page -> Privacy of Info -> Terms & Conditions
© 2006-2008 www.justfindarticles.com All Rights Reserved Worldwide.