The shirt changing technique was cool and all that but this is something I can see myself using again and again. Thanks, David! They say that practice is what makes you a better videographer but I think having something to practice with is even better. Please do more of these.
I've been out of the video recording aspect of photography since the 1990s. I'm amazed what can be done on a shoestring budget and look high dollar professional at the same time.
David, the whip transition is a versatile edit tecnique, but it works best when the scene changes dramtically, like from outdoors to indoors. Or from the beach to the ski slopes. The "soda machine" whip was so smooth, it looked like it was just a jerky camera movement. Even though the edit looks cool, it can be overdone. That is why the staright cut ends up being the go-to edit. Back to the soda machine cut, we can be amazed with our own work knowing what it took to do something, but the viewer only sees what the final product looks like. We have to amaze the viewer, not ourselves.
If the red bull case gets you that visually stimulated, I cant imagine how wired you'll be after you actually drink it! Love the quick tips too. Keep them coming.
Well this video got me to subscribe! I was like, Oh he must be using the whip transition in premiere... but nooooooooooo! I was impressed how well that actually works! Thanks for the tip!!!
This is perfect! I was actually thinking of doing a vid with quick transitions but didn't know how to do it, then this vid pops. Love quick tip Tuesdays 👍 awesome content as always David.
Always great to see a guy get so excited over a smooth transition! Great video David, I'll definitely be trying this one out, so simple yet so effective!
Haven't seend your videos in a while, I thought you stopped making videos. Just got suggested the one about the photography and came to check your channel and noticed that I missed a lot
One thing i had learnt about this from Cody Warner - even if you cant do a fast whip you can end up using speed ramp and that helps. And also sometimes a reverse clip works well too.
these are the kinds of videos I didn't know I needed until last week's quick tip tuesday. Hide the transition in the blur. So obvious but that'll stick with me forever.
i really like your positive and energetic tutorials, really fun to watch. one question , can we create blurry effect on our older videos which were not shot with 1/double shutter speed , just the transition part, it might work i guess?
You might be able to use a motion blur effect in some editing software to create a similar effect. Ideally though you create the real motion blur in camera👍
Great explanation of this method. You are the king of the quick tip. Keep it coming. I thought I noticed in your timeline a sound effect. Are you using any effect during the transition?
@@DavidManningvlog Of course from Epidemic Sound. Thanks for turning me on to them. Future thought - How do we do this type of effect (or similar) if we didn't do it in camera? You know, for those of "me", that don't plan ahead.
@@DavidManningvlog gotcha. Thank you. I was not sure if it came with your Adobe editor or from somewhere else. Of course, Epidemic. Or I can voice over the whoosh. That would be hilarious! Hahaha.
Can you explain how you quickly adjust manual settings on an action cam? Like when you walked into the store did you have to fiddle with settings for a second before you filmed? And then change it again when you walked back outside? This is always such a hassle when I'm on vacation and trying to fil but also enjoy! That's why I never set my shutter manually.
Sure thing Christina! Basically, there’s three things that control exposure; aperture, shutter speed, and ISO. Your aperture on an action cam is locked in, you’re going to set your shutter speed to 1/50th, so your last control is ISO. Set your ISO to 100 as a low and 1600 as the high. Then your camera will still have some ability to automatically adjust between bright and dark areas👍
Hey David, great video! I was watching some other vids that show how a lower frame rate on action cameras will cause the stabilization to not work as good. And they basically showed how having a 180 degree shutter angle then made the footage almost unusable. Have you had experience with this and how do you get around it?
For sure an issue Ben! Mainly because action cameras are using a digital stabilization, so the camera is analyzing each frame to create the stabilization. When those frames are blurry, it isn’t able to match one to the next. So basically, if you’re doing a ton of shaking and are relying heavily on the digital stabilization, pop off the ND filters and just use auto shutter, then when you’re using an action cam more like a regular video camera, pop on the ND filters so things look the best!
Unfortunately, there’s not really a good way to do that in camera with the ONE X2. Mainly, because there’s no ND filters for 360 cams, so even getting the 180 shutter angle would be super hard. But THEN, the camera would probably really struggle to get the stitch right with motion blur going on. Long story short, you could do a digital blur in post that might come close👍
Yeah, I’m almost always at double frame rate for these videos. The only time I won’t be at a 180 degree shutter angle is if I’m using a 360 cam or action camera. That’s only because I’m lazy with those cams and just grabbing fun shots. But for anything else I’m filming, I’ll have a Variable ND filter on the camera so I can maintain that 180 shutter angle👍
Hi! So from my understanding, to do this with my GoPro 7 black I need to adjust manual the shutter/frames ratio or it works with the settings you recomended in an gopro 7 black best settings? Thank you!
To do this with your GoPro, you’ll need to manually set your shutter speed to double your frame rate. So if you frame rate is 24 FPS, you’ll use 1/48th and if your frame rate is 30 FPS, you’ll use 1/60th. The reason you’ll need an ND filter in bright scenarios is that at 1/48th shutter, you’ll usually have too much light and the image will be super overexposed. So an ND filter reduces the amount of light so you can maintain a good exposure at that low of a shutter speed👍
@@DavidManningvlog ok. Very helpfull and clear your answer. I have to purchase filters. Can I do it with 60fps and 1/120th ? (I presume I will deff need filters) Thank you for taking your time to answer my question.