SHOOTING VIDEO FOR THE WEB. The basics of videography for blogs and online news sites

SHOOTING VIDEO FOR THE WEB The basics of videography for blogs and online news sites WHAT WE WILL COVER TODAY Before you leave the building… “Just s...
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SHOOTING VIDEO FOR THE WEB The basics of videography for blogs and online news sites

WHAT WE WILL COVER TODAY Before you leave the building… “Just shoot me” Basic guidelines for web video Framing the shot Rule of thirds Shoot for your editor (usually you) Stabilize the camera Chasing some action Action in the frame Use ALL available light Lighting tips A few sound rules Questions?

BEFORE YOU LEAVE THE BUILDING… •

Even if you’re not a boy scout—”be prepared”



Equipment checklist: • Batteries; tapes (if you need them); free-space on hard drive (if you have one); tripod; audio gear; lights (if you can get them); power cords…oh, and the camera



Brain checklist: • What are you shooting; where are you going; how are you going to shoot it; do you need permission to shoot there; is the interviewee ready; have you researched the topic; have you got your notebook, maps, keys, phone, wallet and water; does someone know where you’re going

“JUST SHOOT ME” •

Always aim to shoot the best quality that you can—this means good light, good audio and good camera angles



There are some basic rules you should be following - ‘the rule of thirds’, for example and how to follow action with the camera, without getting all that jerky movement that spoils the shot

BASIC GUIDELINES FOR WEB VIDEO •

Use low-action shots whenever possible • lots of movement can look blurry and pixilated on the web



Keep the camera still

• if you’re shooting action, let it happen in the frame • Zoom, zoom, zoom – in a word “No” •

Make sure your subject is well lit from the front

• get as much light as you can in the shot, people’s faces in particular and important action •

Strive for good quality audio (more on this in a future class) • GIGO: garbage in, garbage out

FRAMING THE SHOT •

A good shot will always fill the frame



Get as physically close as you can to the subject/action “Zoom with your feet”



Familiarise yourself with the grammar of the shot: • Long/wide/establishing shots (panoramic, scene-setting) • Mid-shots (from the mid thigh or higher)/Head and shoulders (closeup)/ECU (extreme close-up) • Cutaways/B-roll (shots that you can use to fill in and cover up difficult edit-points) • Choose your background carefully – “decorate” • Pan (l-r) zoom (in-out) tilt (up-down)

RULE OF THIRDS • Imagine the scene you want to frame overlaid with a grid breaking it into nine rectangles of equal size • Find the major point of interest in the shot as your focal point • Frame major foreground objects into the left or right horizontal third and into the middle third • Fill at least two thirds vertically

The theory is that if you place points of interest in the intersections or along the lines that your photo becomes more balanced and will enable a viewer of the image to interact with it more naturally.

EXAMPLES

SHOOT FOR YOUR EDITOR (USUALLY YOU) •

Editing is always easier if you (or your editor) has a good selection of useable shots and great audio (well pretty good audio)



Most times you only get one shot at getting a shot • Action speaks louder than words – shoot wide first and shoot wide often



Objects that are relevant or interesting; details faces, hands, windows, artworks, flowers, friends, doors, damage, colour, emotion, metaphor, beauty, intrigue, curiosity, personality make great insert/cutaway shots • But don’t waste time on that till you get the action



Take time to frame an interview shot – even in the heat of the moment

• Take more time with a set-up interview • Frame, sound-check, re-frame, record

STABILIZE THE CAMERA •

There’s nothing worse than shaky footage, except unintentionally shaky footage



Keep the camera still—sure, but how?



Use a tripod – still the most effective way and you can then operate the controls without jerking the camera around



Steady yourself and the camera against something solid that’s not moving: • a tree, a wall, a table, a heavy (non-operating) piece of machinery; rest your elbows on the roof of the car; get someone to hold you or to lean against

WHERE CAN THE CAMERA GO? •

180 degree rule



for any given sequence of shots stay on one side of the subject



a half-circle along an imaginary line through the subject forms your shooting area

Crossing the line is a very important concept in video and film production. It refers to an imaginary line which cuts through the middle of the scene, from side to side with respect to the camera. Crossing the line changes the viewer's perspective in such a way that it causes disorientation and confusion. For this reason, crossing the line is something to be avoided.

CHASING SOME ACTION •

If you keep the camera still, how do you shoot action?



Let the action come to you



Frame a wide shot and let the action move through the frame



Start with an empty frame (if you can), hold the shot until the frame is empty again



Pan, zoom, tilt – if you want to try it – • from a standing position on a tripod

• start and finish on a still subject, or hold the shot till it leaves the frame

ACTION IN THE FRAME •

For interview subjects – frame wide or deep enough to get hands in frame if they move, using slow tilt



If you’re on your own, keep it simple • a good seated MCU set wide (camera close) over one shoulder, • or standing head and shoulders to mid chest [don’t cross the line] • If in doubt, keep it wide – for crowd scenes, sports and parades • Don’t shoot flat – angle the camera so that the action is moving towards (not head-on) or away into a horizon or vertical vanishing point (thirds)

USE ALL AVAILABLE LIGHT •

Dark, greyed-out and grainy footage cannot be repaired in post-production (GIGO again)



Using professional lighting rigs is expensive, time-consuming and not for the D-I-Y beginner



Simple-to-use ‘hotshoe’ lights for modern digital cameras work well for lighting faces—if you’re close enough



When in doubt take it out(side)—there’s nothing wrong with asking your interviewee to go outside, but be very careful about noisy locations • Open the curtains/blinds and turn on the lights • A simple table or desk lamp makes a reasonable spotlight for faces

LIGHTING TIPS •

Don’t shoot into direct sunlight



If you’re outside on a really sunny day, find some light/dappled shade



Don’t shoot with the sun in your interviewee’s eyes, they squint and look stupid



If you only have a little amount of light, get it on your subject any way you can—use the desk lamp etc and bring it close, then frame the shot to leave it out (see rule of thirds)

A FEW SOUND RULES •

Read up and practice microphone technique



Test your microphones before using them, particularly the first time



If using a small ‘prosumer’ camera, fit an external mic if you can



Where possible use lapel mics for interviews – if you only have one, put it on the talent, not on you



If your camera lets you ALWAYS check your audio levels in a pre-record test



Stay away from noisy locations and high wind situations

QUESTIONS? This power point available for viewing anytime at www.thesunchronicle.com/video_class

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