![]() |
|
|
Story by
brepettis
Published on May 5, 2008 in How-To |
Photo by Bre Pettis |
There is something special about video that you can't get from writing or photographs. Seeing someone on video is more personal. I really want to see more links to videos on the Etsy site, so I'm starting up this tutorial series to get you started making your own videos. Making videos gives the world a chance to see the personality and process behind the things you make.
Let's start with some super cheap cameras. If you're wanting to make video on a budget, you have a few options. The simplest option is to use what you've got. You may already have a video camera. Did you know that most digital photography cameras have a movie mode that takes great video? If you've got one of these, you're done looking, start shooting! A lot of time you can even set these to 640x480 resolution which is good enough to make great web videos. If you're buying something, the cheapest option is to use a flip camera. These are pretty inexpensive and they are easy to use. The resolution isn't fantastic, but they are small and light and easy to carry around and shoot things with.
If you're looking to step it up, the next level of video camera is a DV camera. You can find these for around 200-300 dollars. When you're looking for a camera, check to make sure that it's got a microphone jack and a headphone jack so that you can hook up an external mic and listen to the level of the sound as it's recording. Make sure your computer has a firewire port before getting one of these or you won't be able to transfer the video over.
If you're feeling fancy, you can get an HD camera. You can get a camera like the Sony HC1 which records HD video to DV tape (little mini digital video cassette tapes). But my recommendation is that you skip recording to tape. I'm in favor of using cameras that record straight to an SD Card, which is similar to the little card your digital still camera uses. If you've got somewhere between $600 and $1000 to spend, I'd recommend, the Sanyo Xacti HD2 which is a great little 720P camera or the Canon Vixia HF10. I've also played around with this Panasonic HSC1UP camera which is a bit more expensive, but has 3 chips in it which means the colors are a little snazzier. All of these record to SD cards. If you are going to be using iMovie (the video editing software that comes free with Macs), you'll want to get the Sanyo Xacti which records to an easily convertable MP4 format. The Panasonic and Canon SD cams both record to AVCHD which is a wonderful format allowing a lot of hi-res info to fit on a card, but it's not compatible with iMovie 7 at this time.
If you've got a serious budget and you're thinking about shooting broadcast HD, you can get the Panasonic HVX200. We shoot our Handmade Video Portraits on this. This is a professional level camera and it's awesome. There's a bit of a learning curve to dealing with P2 cards though, so be prepared to spend a day or two reading the manual.
A great place to go and learn more about cameras is creativecow.net. The forums there are really helpful and the community is great.
No matter what camera you get, I recommend getting an extra battery and separate battery charger. There is nothing worse than running out of batteries when you are shooting something special.
If a wide-angle lens is available for your camera, get it! I love wide-angle shots to be able to show lots of a room in your frame.
Again, the best thing to get started with is what you've got.
In the forums I asked for camera recommendations and got this message.
My next video is about tips for shooting video. If you've got an idea you can leave a comment, or leave a note in the forums or leave a message at 917-720-4197 and maybe I'll post it with the next video.
| Tags | bre pettis, cameras, diy, Getting Started in Video, howto, instructions, movies, promoting, review, Seller Handbook, selling, video |
|---|
13 comments Login to add your own!
sewbettie
I'm so excited to see this series because I have been dying to make video tutorials for the patterns in my Etsy shop. I don't really have the budget for a video camera at the moment (oh med school debt you evil jerk), but any chance you could make some recommendations about webcams and how to use them?
geebsjewels
This is just in time for me. I borrowed a video camera and I've bee experimenting - I'll be anxiously waiting for your next installment.
fernfiddlehead
Hey Bre -- as you know, I've done a couple of my own videos with very little knowledge or skill. But I have a JVC Everto HD and am wondering how to set it to the right thing for taking movies for the web. You see, I don't even know how to talk about this.
littlepurls
thanks bre! i'm really excited about this. i never thought i would do something like this, but i'm happy to say you got me all stoked to make a video. whoohoo!
pollyannacowgirl
thanks, bre! i'm terrified of making a video, but thanks to you, my fear levels have fallen. :)
brepettis
As a side note, if you're using an AVCHD camera, there isn't iMovie support for that codec, so you'd need final cut to import that.
Schmutzerland
Thanks Bre! I have been thinking a lot about making videos lately for my etsy store, and you just confirmed the fact that I should!
<3
Lauren
selflesh
Thanks Bre.
I just recently started experimenting with video, and edited myself a speedy version of some embroidery work!
http://www.flickr.com/photos/selflesh...
One helpful tip...
Sound doesn't transfer from my Sony Cyber-shot camera into iMovie, so I found MPEG Streamclip (via google) to convert my sound.
Works like a charm!
;)
Best,
>s
ShadesOfBling
Hey thanks for this article! I have been wanting to do a vid also. I experimented some but when I went to view it through my camera software it shuts my computer down and gives an ERROR MESSAGE? Do you have any idea why that would happen and maybe there's some different I need to do as far as uploading it to my puter? Thanks! Marla



1AEON
HeyMichelle
mirandahellman
Yay Bre! Way to help peeps out!