This guy is amazing. I can really appreciate the directness in these type of videos without all of the extra talking a lot of youtubers tend to do which easly makes a 8 minute video into a 15 minute one. Keep it up man!
I love this guy so much. I just left Northeastern U to tell stories of entrepreneurs and create "brand" for smaller businesses and, in the future, larger businesses. These videos help me so much to understand cameras and video and everything else to be able to execute on the visions in my head. Can't thank you enough man
Dmn it! I always wondered why my gh5s produced "shallower" footage with slow motion sometimes. Thanks for the "breaking the 180° rule sometimes" tip 👌🏾 Helpful tips as always
@@shioribarcelona 180 degree rule, where the shutter speed is double your frame rate. Listen closely to tip #5 at around minute @4:30 where he breaks the 180 degree rule by increasing his frame rate to get a clearer footage of the writings on the Bag being pulled out from the refrigerator.
Daniel, I appreciate the fact that you don't waste people's time and get straight to the point. And your tips are so helpful! Thanks for being such a huge inspiration man, starting out myself on RU-vid now as well and you've been one of my main influences! Genuinely and wholeheartedly, thank you. Nick
I’m happy I found your channel. It’s hard to afford all those online classes (Parker Welbeck, Tommorow film makers). I ha e learned so much from you. Thank you.
I've often always stuck to the 180-degree shutter rule just 'because' it's proper, but often times you do have to step outside of the textbook and improvise a bit. Often times it looks WAY better! Another banger, thanks Daniel!
I don't shoot fuzzy un-sharp blurry smeared images -- and I am *so* happy to find a video where someone still values a clear image from time to time. The early history of film-making produced the 'cinematic' look -- slow frame rates, slow exposures, and wide-open lenses because film was so damn slow. Blurry footage was the result -- an effect obsequiously replicated by present-day film makers. The 'cinematic look' can be used to great effect, but I see it used to the extreme *way* too much. Many people call it 'art.' In fact, it's mostly crummy video made by obsessed and lazy camera operators.
You are my mentor when it comes to video making, thank you very much for helping us making better videos. All your the tutorials are insanely 🔥 awesome 👏
I watch all of your videos. I have for a long time. This one is ridiculous. Ridiculously good!! Thank you for sharing tips like this. They really help me grow and learn as a filmmaker. Peace! ✌️
I was going to sign up for Squarespace and didn't have a code... I thought i would support you so I found a video you had with Squarespace to help you out a little bit! thanks for everything you're doing! I can't wait to start my own business soon!
when I first started out, i thought it was his transitions and shifts that made his videos so awesome ... now that i'm getting along .. i now see that it's 100% his creativity
VERYYYY awesome tips here... Breaking the shutter rule will take a little longer for me to understand as am super new to the video world but... This was a brilliant video Daniel... Thank you much! 🙏🏽
I don't typically comment on your videos but wanted to say that this video was really great. 👍👌 This was advice that I wouldn't have guessed or expected. Thanks for sharing!
I love the canon prime 24mm f 2.8 for that realistic look! I also noticed in your freeze frame that your 'fridge/ bag shot', the bag was flipped around. You can see the two images are different. It's actually not the same shot. The lack of text print on the reverse side prob also made the label pop more. Just something I noticed. Great video!
It’d be dope if you made a video on your body movements when you’re getting your shots. Like, how do your arms and legs move for certain motions. Sometimes I struggle with smoother shots because I think I need practice with my overall body motions. Obviously talking about shots where the camera is in your hands. Hope that makes sense lol. Keep making sick content!!!
Great advice, since I suffer from unsharpen footages, in tip number 4 I had to stop and print my note pad and a pen starting over again to write them down .. Thank you Dan.
u are unbelievably skilled. There is no such as having luck more than hard work. Really appreciate your work and video editing explaining skills, props to you boy!!! I am currently watch out for set ups improvement....and one day I want to reach out for a similar level like you. ;)
Duuuuuude, great! I have been wandering all the time, how are u making so crisp looking videos. It couldn't be only the camera. Can you make one video more about this topic in order of lighting? There is a field, where (even with hi-end cameras) your scene can look so washed out. Since a week ago I hadn't been conscious it's because of the lighting. Best regards dude, great work!
as always... another great video! I also break the 180 degree rule in most of my videos I do On real estate. I soot using a slider in most cases and find that i get much sharper clips at 1/100 rather than 1/60th when I film Fire or water features like pool spillways or fountains I shoot 120fps and slow the shutter to from 1/250th to 1/120th to increase the blur. AWESOME! GREAT VIDEO BUD!