Great tutorial! I was wondering this exact thing - whether using the CPL without proper orientation was worth while. Seems like the answer is definitely yes.
Such a good tutorial again and great use of the pola ! Love the pigeon feature ! Fact about that species they used to be restricted to arid and semi arid zones extremely rarely seen on the coast, now they are common in many coastal towns !
Really interesting, I have had the half scene polarised effect before on a wide lens. Never really thought why, just put it down to my cheap polariser.
Tip with those same filters is to use the ND filter to slow down the shutter speed in order to get the right amount of motion blur. For video at 24fps you want 1/48 sec shutter speed (or 1/50). Basically what ever frame rate your video is in take the number double it and put it under 1 (e.g. 25 fps video >> 1/50 SS, 30 fps video >> 1/60 SS, 60 fps video >> 1/120 SS.) Your eye wants a certain amount of motikn blur in movements and action. And if it is bright outside and you dont use an ND filter (similar to sunglasses), your camera will speed up the shutter. This makes for better individual photos, but makes the video look choppy. Especially large shots of landscapes with parallax movement, action shots, going along repeated patterns, etc. An ND4 filter adds 2 stops of light, an ND8 adds 3 stops of light, and an ND16 adds 4 stops of light.
What's super duper significant but no one mentions is the maximum benefit you'll find is using D-Log, and colour grading yourself, but shooting a d-log profile requires a minimum of 500iso, so you'd probably (unconfirmed, don't take my word) need twice the ND stopping power than you might expect or you'll be way overexposed. This doesn't seem to be covered in any video's of ND/polarisation comparison's I've seen.
Thanks for the info and advice -- I tried to buy one of these serkerler prolerisers and couldn't get one for the life of me. Couldn't get a serkruler poliserer either. Damn they're hard to track down.
Thank you ;) that was some very nice footage too, do you feel like sharing at what frame rate you shot it and how much you slowed it down? I would love to know. Cheers from dk :)
Great video! I was actually looking at some of these polarizers for my mavic pro the other day. I'm glad I stumbled upon your channel and will definitely check out your affiliate link ;)
'The two panes interact'... I have no knowledge of polar filters with two panes... Turning the CPL changes the direction how light can enter the camera, it doesn't need a second pane. It's one pane who can be orientated in function of reflections. If you have two panes interacting with each other it's a VND-filter (build as two polar filters interacting, mostly with ND from 2 tot 8 as result).
Without the hazzle of polarization. Wich - I guess works only when you fly in one direction relatively to the sun. (But then again - I have never used PL filters. )
@@MatthewVandeputte Hi Matthew, is it true then, that flying the drone in various degrees from the sun (the technical aviation term would be "yaw") will give you different undisered effects, like dark patches and color shifts. Or is this effect mitigated when you tilt the gimbal downwards. I am sure that rolling would give you that effect (like you did in your hand) , but the rolling of the drone itself is negligible since the rolling is compensated for by the gimbal. Thanx Oliver
It's a top notch pigeon. Thanks for your tutorial.
you left out one great advantage of cpl filters... you can see into water. I video fish schools with my drone.
Very true!!
Thank you for not having an annoying intro.
Thanks for the appreciation!
Great tutorial! I was wondering this exact thing - whether using the CPL without proper orientation was worth while. Seems like the answer is definitely yes.
Cheers!
Great video!
At D-LOG mode it is advisable to use?
thanks
Have a nice vacation! And great vid mat
Fantastic video. Thanks for making it! I just ordered a filter for my own drone.
Do you have any idea if the cpl filter must be adjusted when shooting vertical in drone ?
Such a good tutorial again and great use of the pola ! Love the pigeon feature ! Fact about that species they used to be restricted to arid and semi arid zones extremely rarely seen on the coast, now they are common in many coastal towns !
thank you, good explanations, don´t knoe the bird
Really interesting, I have had the half scene polarised effect before on a wide lens. Never really thought why, just put it down to my cheap polariser.
Tip with those same filters is to use the ND filter to slow down the shutter speed in order to get the right amount of motion blur. For video at 24fps you want 1/48 sec shutter speed (or 1/50). Basically what ever frame rate your video is in take the number double it and put it under 1 (e.g. 25 fps video >> 1/50 SS, 30 fps video >> 1/60 SS, 60 fps video >> 1/120 SS.)
Your eye wants a certain amount of motikn blur in movements and action. And if it is bright outside and you dont use an ND filter (similar to sunglasses), your camera will speed up the shutter. This makes for better individual photos, but makes the video look choppy. Especially large shots of landscapes with parallax movement, action shots, going along repeated patterns, etc.
An ND4 filter adds 2 stops of light, an ND8 adds 3 stops of light, and an ND16 adds 4 stops of light.
This tip holds true for shooting video on any camera, not just drones...
Yeah but it's a good tip because lots of people underestimate ND filters on phones and drones.
What's super duper significant but no one mentions is the maximum benefit you'll find is using D-Log, and colour grading yourself, but shooting a d-log profile requires a minimum of 500iso, so you'd probably (unconfirmed, don't take my word) need twice the ND stopping power than you might expect or you'll be way overexposed.
This doesn't seem to be covered in any video's of ND/polarisation comparison's I've seen.
Thanks for the video. It really helped a lot
LOL Matt! Youre getting so good at that intro ahah
Finska Game! Always fun with friends.. And yes.. Philippines specifically Palawan... Awesome!
Best intro ever!
Thanks for the info and advice -- I tried to buy one of these serkerler prolerisers and couldn't get one for the life of me. Couldn't get a serkruler poliserer either. Damn they're hard to track down.
Thanks a lot! This was very usefull!
New sub!
Coming soon on this very channel, a new series: "Real cute birds" lmao
Taking a wild guess: it is a pigeon, it is crested, Imma say crested pigeon (?)
Helpful video thanks..im new so any info helps..
Thank you ;) that was some very nice footage too, do you feel like sharing at what frame rate you shot it and how much you slowed it down? I would love to know.
Cheers from dk :)
Were you at Indonesia or Asia? That bird name is Perkutut fyi
Great video! I was actually looking at some of these polarizers for my mavic pro the other day. I'm glad I stumbled upon your channel and will definitely check out your affiliate link ;)
I used freewell and it caused horrible vignetting. Back to the drawing board
It honestly looks like the lens is too wide for a polarizer, at least on skies.
20/10 Intro
What beach is this?
I think I have to get a set of ND and polariser filters. Sorry, I hate pigeons, but it smiles nice in your video haha
Dutch Nomad Couple do not diss the magnificent crested pigeon ! So different to the pigeons you know 😬😍
Did you find that the ND filter also made the footage smoother due to lower shutter speeds?
'The two panes interact'... I have no knowledge of polar filters with two panes...
Turning the CPL changes the direction how light can enter the camera, it doesn't need a second pane. It's one pane who can be orientated in function of reflections.
If you have two panes interacting with each other it's a VND-filter (build as two polar filters interacting, mostly with ND from 2 tot 8 as result).
Are you Dutch? Thanks for uploading this I will buy one for my Mavic Zooom, I don’t believe in the ND 8-16-32 hype because they make fuzzy 😂
I liked this because of the bird
Polarized looks indeed better. But for the sake of argument I think the same can be achieved by using DLog-M in post.
Without the hazzle of polarization. Wich - I guess works only when you fly in one direction relatively to the sun. (But then again - I have never used PL filters. )
I get what you mean but no not really. You can't remove reflections from surfaces (water, roads, sand) etc
@@MatthewVandeputte Hi Matthew, is it true then, that flying the drone in various degrees from the sun (the technical aviation term would be "yaw") will give you different undisered effects, like dark patches and color shifts. Or is this effect mitigated when you tilt the gimbal downwards.
I am sure that rolling would give you that effect (like you did in your hand) , but the rolling of the drone itself is negligible since the rolling is compensated for by the gimbal. Thanx Oliver
Yeah depending on the angle and the position of the sun you'll get different effects.
Works same on mobile phones. Well the principles at least.
exapt that your HIGHLIGHTS roll of very ugly on youtube, the FOOTAGE looks slick!
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crested_pigeon
Did you borrow one of Pharrell's hats?
I like the unpolarized. More natural look
Filtrage😂😂😂
What a difference oh that bird is a ground Dove 🕊️