Evan Lloyd
July 25th, 2010, 02:08 PM
Hey guys,
I was recently asked to film a small wedding for a friend. I do videography for summer camps and also for kayaking and surfing. I agreed to do the wedding, but I told them not to expect much. I have a bunch of fun gear like glide tracks, a merlin, a motorized pan head, and a hand full of HD cameras. After spending a ton of time reading as much as I could on this forum, I felt really confident and ready to go. I made a check list of equipment, a list of shots I wanted, I got to the site super early and did a bunch of B-roll shots. At the end of the day I felt like I came away with some quality stuff. Everyone was happy, there were no issues with photographers. I didn't miss any key shots. Everything went more or less as planned. And then I came home to upload the footage... Dun Dun Dun.
I uploaded the footy from the B cam first. It looked good. Lot's of usable stuff. (Canon HV30) Then I uploaded the footy from the A cam... and it wouldn't play (A1s). After more internet research, it appears that the head was dirty on my camera, and the camera didn't record correctly. Out of 2 hours of footage, I came away with 15 minutes of usable footage. What is super frustrating is that I can see the shots when I fast forward and rewind, but when I hit play, the tape hangs up and shows me a blue screen. Of course after reading online, I now now that the Sony Premium mini DV tapes are known to do this. Ooops.
The good news is, I shot everything with 2 cameras. The footage from the B cam looks great. I did all of my tripod/glide shots on the B cam and all of the handheld stuff on the bad camera. I managed to record the entire ceremony on the B cam and the audio was recorded on Olympus DS30s, so it's all good. I'll be able to make a good highlight video, and an okay ceremony video, but it's just not as good as it should have been. I'm pretty bummed.
That said, I charged nothing, learned a lot, and I'm sure they are still going to be happy. This was a very small, no budget wedding for a friend. Not a high stress situation. The grooms dad shot most of the photos. You get the idea. Low key.
Anyway, I learned a few things that I hope I can share with you. Most of you know this, but some of the new guys like me might want a reminder.
1. Check your camera and make sure it is in working order.
2. Clean the heads regularly
3. Use new high quality tapes. If you are recording onto tape.
I'll post a clip when I get done editing. I'm not a wedding pro like most of you, but I hope it looks good. I am so grateful for this website. I have learned a ton and I am inspired by your videos. I doubt I'll ever be a full time wedding guy, but the experience was fun and rewarding and I would do it again is a second.
Thanks
Evan
PS One thing I did last minute was pass around 2 Flip HD cameras during dinner. I told each table to record each other. They proceeded to record themselves wishing the bride and groom good luck and stuff like that. The footage is real genuine and turned out awesome. I think the bride and groom will appreciate it. Those flip cameras are perfect for stuff like this.
I was recently asked to film a small wedding for a friend. I do videography for summer camps and also for kayaking and surfing. I agreed to do the wedding, but I told them not to expect much. I have a bunch of fun gear like glide tracks, a merlin, a motorized pan head, and a hand full of HD cameras. After spending a ton of time reading as much as I could on this forum, I felt really confident and ready to go. I made a check list of equipment, a list of shots I wanted, I got to the site super early and did a bunch of B-roll shots. At the end of the day I felt like I came away with some quality stuff. Everyone was happy, there were no issues with photographers. I didn't miss any key shots. Everything went more or less as planned. And then I came home to upload the footage... Dun Dun Dun.
I uploaded the footy from the B cam first. It looked good. Lot's of usable stuff. (Canon HV30) Then I uploaded the footy from the A cam... and it wouldn't play (A1s). After more internet research, it appears that the head was dirty on my camera, and the camera didn't record correctly. Out of 2 hours of footage, I came away with 15 minutes of usable footage. What is super frustrating is that I can see the shots when I fast forward and rewind, but when I hit play, the tape hangs up and shows me a blue screen. Of course after reading online, I now now that the Sony Premium mini DV tapes are known to do this. Ooops.
The good news is, I shot everything with 2 cameras. The footage from the B cam looks great. I did all of my tripod/glide shots on the B cam and all of the handheld stuff on the bad camera. I managed to record the entire ceremony on the B cam and the audio was recorded on Olympus DS30s, so it's all good. I'll be able to make a good highlight video, and an okay ceremony video, but it's just not as good as it should have been. I'm pretty bummed.
That said, I charged nothing, learned a lot, and I'm sure they are still going to be happy. This was a very small, no budget wedding for a friend. Not a high stress situation. The grooms dad shot most of the photos. You get the idea. Low key.
Anyway, I learned a few things that I hope I can share with you. Most of you know this, but some of the new guys like me might want a reminder.
1. Check your camera and make sure it is in working order.
2. Clean the heads regularly
3. Use new high quality tapes. If you are recording onto tape.
I'll post a clip when I get done editing. I'm not a wedding pro like most of you, but I hope it looks good. I am so grateful for this website. I have learned a ton and I am inspired by your videos. I doubt I'll ever be a full time wedding guy, but the experience was fun and rewarding and I would do it again is a second.
Thanks
Evan
PS One thing I did last minute was pass around 2 Flip HD cameras during dinner. I told each table to record each other. They proceeded to record themselves wishing the bride and groom good luck and stuff like that. The footage is real genuine and turned out awesome. I think the bride and groom will appreciate it. Those flip cameras are perfect for stuff like this.