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Is Your Camera Controlling Your Image?

Believe it or not, I was once a ranch hand.  Besides the usual excitement of feeding the horses, chickens, dogs, and other animals, my days consisted of lots of time alone, walking the acres of the East Texas ranch.

This stoic season left me with lots of great memories.  My favorite memory, however, was not walking by the beautiful pond, or across the emerald green  pastures; my favorite memory was saddling up the horses to get that “darn bull” back into his pen.  During this time, the rancher would put me on a rodeo winning, 3/4 thoroughbred, cutting horse.  I’m serious, this horse knew more about “rustlin’ up that old bull” than I did.

During these exciting rides, my horse would run full gallop across the field, get in front of the charging bull and “cut” back, leaning nearly to the ground. It was all I could do to keep from being thrown for a country mile. I was having a great time, but that rancher was not impressed.

“You’re a rider, not a passenger!” he would yell at me. “You need to control that horse!”

I see the same thing when I look at video sites like youtube or vimeo.  While there are many true artists out there, a lot of videographers seem to point their nice cameras at pretty things and hit record.  Instead of controlling the image, they let the camera define it.  What I say to myself as well as others is: “You are videographer, not a passenger!  You need to control that image!”

Just because my camera has a shallow depth of field, should I really use it for every single shot?  Just because the image looks good with natural light, will I get more depth if I light the background separately? Will my story be told better with fast falloff, or with flat lighting?  What items in the frame move my story/ interview/ promo video forward?  Should I make sure all of them are in focus, or does a little blurriness create a sense of mystery?

As videographers, we have an opportunity to move the story forward.  Don’t settle for pretty… Control your camera and go for art.

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Filmmaking Local Business Uncategorized

Opportunities and Challenges of the New Video Landscape

 

The landscape of video production is changing at an alarming rate. The digital revolution rolls on as standards change from HD to 2, 4, 6, and even 8K.  Sub $5,000 cameras (especially DSLRs) allow the kid down the street to take shots that would have required a full crew less than a decade ago. Video sites are flooded with masterpieces.

So how do we find our places in this new digital landscape?

It’s simple really…  The best storytellers will emerge. Those who push their craft, hone their skills, don’t rest on their laurels and don’t let the camera define their style will begin to stand out.  Good business practices;  good work ethics;  Good customer relations:  These are the timeless principles that will always remain.

A good camera is a beginning… a good shot is a building block… a good story will stand out… good storytelling will excel… and good businesses will remain.