Drew Fulton
February 27th, 2009, 03:28 PM
Greetings,
I am currently in the market for a high end consumer camcorder to shoot and produce instructional videos. The videos fall into a wide range of topics from photography to triathlon training. Videos will be prepared for commercial sale so I am looking for the highest quality I can get out of a consumer camcorder. This is a small startup company and if things go well, we will make the jump to higher end cameras.
We won't be shooting in tough conditions. Instructors will be Lav Mic'd so sound shouldn't be too much of an issue. Other than that, camera movements and filming should be fairly straight forward and simple.
I am after the best bang for my buck. I like the idea of solid state recording as opposed to HDs but am open to either. I was pretty much set on the new HF S11 coming out in April now but am now looking back at the currently available models and wondering, is the difference in price worth the extra resolution.
I am migrating to video from professional photography where resolution means a lot. In video, I thought 1080 was 1080 but I am realizing there is more to it than that. CAn someone fill me in and make some recommendations?
Thanks!
Best,
Drew
I am currently in the market for a high end consumer camcorder to shoot and produce instructional videos. The videos fall into a wide range of topics from photography to triathlon training. Videos will be prepared for commercial sale so I am looking for the highest quality I can get out of a consumer camcorder. This is a small startup company and if things go well, we will make the jump to higher end cameras.
We won't be shooting in tough conditions. Instructors will be Lav Mic'd so sound shouldn't be too much of an issue. Other than that, camera movements and filming should be fairly straight forward and simple.
I am after the best bang for my buck. I like the idea of solid state recording as opposed to HDs but am open to either. I was pretty much set on the new HF S11 coming out in April now but am now looking back at the currently available models and wondering, is the difference in price worth the extra resolution.
I am migrating to video from professional photography where resolution means a lot. In video, I thought 1080 was 1080 but I am realizing there is more to it than that. CAn someone fill me in and make some recommendations?
Thanks!
Best,
Drew