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Videography
D3300 to produce short business videos indoors
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<blockquote data-quote="aroy" data-source="post: 520868" data-attributes="member: 16090"><p>I normally shoot in aperture priority. There is no provision for RAW or JPEG in movies the body saves in MOV format, so keeping the camera in RAW mode is best.</p><p></p><p>. Use the highest resolution and frame rate while shooting movies (1080 by 50/60 frames). You can later reformat to lower frame rates or smaller resolution, but you cannot do the reverse.</p><p>For movies it is best to have diffused light across the whole scene. Just make sure that there are no harsh shadows.</p><p>. Background depends on what you are shooting. White background is fine as long as it does not reflect light and confuse the metering.</p><p>. For professional touch, mount the camera on a tripod. That will take care of minor jerks that plague most hand held amateur shots.</p><p></p><p>Once you have shot the movie, use Nikon Movie Editor that comes bundled with View NX-II. You can</p><p>. edit the images frame by frame.</p><p>. add text to the</p><p>. add header and trailer</p><p>. combine multiple shots with transition effects</p><p>. last but not the least you can output to various formats, resolution and frame rates</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="aroy, post: 520868, member: 16090"] I normally shoot in aperture priority. There is no provision for RAW or JPEG in movies the body saves in MOV format, so keeping the camera in RAW mode is best. . Use the highest resolution and frame rate while shooting movies (1080 by 50/60 frames). You can later reformat to lower frame rates or smaller resolution, but you cannot do the reverse. For movies it is best to have diffused light across the whole scene. Just make sure that there are no harsh shadows. . Background depends on what you are shooting. White background is fine as long as it does not reflect light and confuse the metering. . For professional touch, mount the camera on a tripod. That will take care of minor jerks that plague most hand held amateur shots. Once you have shot the movie, use Nikon Movie Editor that comes bundled with View NX-II. You can . edit the images frame by frame. . add text to the . add header and trailer . combine multiple shots with transition effects . last but not the least you can output to various formats, resolution and frame rates [/QUOTE]
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D3300 to produce short business videos indoors
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