Travis Wheaton
May 9th, 2011, 08:31 AM
G'day everyone,
I've joined this forum primarily regarding some camera research, but upon looking around, am thinking it's going to be useful for a load of other reasons too.
In '07 I completed an undergrad degree in film/tv at Griffith University in Brisbane. I loved it! We had access to Sony DV Cams (DSR300, PD150 and PD170, and XDCAM), which made it hard going back to my consumer handcam. I also honed my video editing skills, using solely Final Cut Pro due to software issues between Avid & the XDCAM. I think the most important lesson I learned at film school was what should have been obvious - it really does take a team to make a film, and it's critical that all (creatives especially) involved are seeing the same vision.
Whilst at Uni I worked on 6 short films, 3 of which were "best of the class", and had hopes of getting some of my uni mates together to work on some other projects after we graduated, but ultimately that only resulted in 1 short for the Optus ONE80Project competition in '08. I worked as location assistant on a feature horror flick that had no distributor (still doesn't), and then had to "grow up" and get a real job due to things like a mortgage, credit cards, babies, and supporting my wife while she completed her studies. (I know, feels like a cop-out just saying it..)
I've tried to keep a hand in at least editing, with a copy of FCP 5.1 on a thrashed G5 PowerMac I got from Cashies (pawn store chain here in Oz), but it's not as much fun as working on a real project.
cheers
Travis
I've joined this forum primarily regarding some camera research, but upon looking around, am thinking it's going to be useful for a load of other reasons too.
In '07 I completed an undergrad degree in film/tv at Griffith University in Brisbane. I loved it! We had access to Sony DV Cams (DSR300, PD150 and PD170, and XDCAM), which made it hard going back to my consumer handcam. I also honed my video editing skills, using solely Final Cut Pro due to software issues between Avid & the XDCAM. I think the most important lesson I learned at film school was what should have been obvious - it really does take a team to make a film, and it's critical that all (creatives especially) involved are seeing the same vision.
Whilst at Uni I worked on 6 short films, 3 of which were "best of the class", and had hopes of getting some of my uni mates together to work on some other projects after we graduated, but ultimately that only resulted in 1 short for the Optus ONE80Project competition in '08. I worked as location assistant on a feature horror flick that had no distributor (still doesn't), and then had to "grow up" and get a real job due to things like a mortgage, credit cards, babies, and supporting my wife while she completed her studies. (I know, feels like a cop-out just saying it..)
I've tried to keep a hand in at least editing, with a copy of FCP 5.1 on a thrashed G5 PowerMac I got from Cashies (pawn store chain here in Oz), but it's not as much fun as working on a real project.
cheers
Travis