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Showing posts from March, 2012

This Week in Videography: New Canon 5D Mark III Shoots Longer HD Videos

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VideoLane.com has posted a new item, ' This Week in Videography: New Canon 5D Mark III Shoots Longer HD Videos ' New Canon 5D Mark III Shoots Longer HD Videos The new Canon DSLR camera records video in the widely accepted MPEG-4 AVC/H.264 format. It can shoot in 3 Frame Sizes Full HD 1920 x 1080 good-for-web HD 1280 x 720 and almost SD 640 x 480. There is no worry about getting a PAL or NTSC model like in regular video camcorders because this gadget has everything 30 fps 25 fps 24 fps 60 fps and 50 fps. How long can this baby shoot continuously? Based on a 8GB Card 32 minutes at 1920 x 1080 37 minutes at 1280 x 720 and 97 minutes at 640 x 480. Movie shooting does not stop when the file size reaches 4GB. http://videolane.com/canon-5d-mark-iii/ World's Most Compact and Lightweight DSLR Rig I am always looking for the most protable and lightweight gadget for my camera. This one works like a stabilizer. When it's mounted to the base of your DSLR it looks no b

2-day Basic Videography Course – LIVE in Singapore

Update! Learn how to set up your own green screen studio in a small space. Are You a Self-employed Business Owner, HR Manager or Trainer looking to RECORD and EDIT training sessions, company events, customer testimonials, work processes, or presentation videos? Would you like to author your own DVDs and publish video to the Web? Are you interested in saving time and money by learning how to produce your own videos in-house? This 2-day basic videography course is definitely for you! Join Adrian Lee for 2 days of intense, comprehensive, entertaining and informational training at VideoLane Studio in Bukit Merah Central, Singapore. 2-day Basic Videography Course -LIVE in Singapore

How to Make a Good Cooking Video for YouTube

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VideoLane.com has posted a new item, ' How to Make a Good Cooking Video for YouTube ' A VideoLane.com subscriber posed a question about making cooking videos for YouTube… “How do you suggest I make a good decent video for YouTube – cooking segment. Not interested in showing myself really just the food.” Here’s my response… Let me make some assumptions: You are the one cooking. You are the one shooting. The location is a home kitchen. You don’t want to be seen in the video. Final video is for Youtube. Three things you need: A video camera. A tripod. Lights. Procedure before the shoot: Plan and visualize the sequence of cooking in steps. Ask yourself “What do I want my audience to see?”. Clear a table space with all background distractions removed. Plastic bags and table rags look terrible in a cooking video. Clean up your stove and hide anything that is not relevant to cooking. We don’t need to see a bin or a broom. Arrange your ingredients and utensil