Thank you for your comment! We're happy for you keep it up! Let us know how your project evolves; we'd love to hear more about your short film. Best of luck with the script and the shoot this year!
Thank you for your comment! For cameras shooting 4K at 120fps in 10-bit, a V90 SD card is essential to handle the high data rates. If your camera shoots 4K at 60fps in 10-bit, a V60 could work, but we recommend a V90 for better reliability and future-proofing. That said, it all depends on the specific camera. Check the manufacturer’s recommendations on their official website. 🙂
If you shoot outside or in bright conditions, you need an ND filter to keep your shutter speed low or to keep your aperture open to have a shallow depth of field. When shooting inside, it's more of a quality of life improvement as you can easily turn the filter to adjust your exposure.
Fantastic video.
Thanks! Glad you liked it!
Love that chanel!❤️
We're glad you like our content!
These dudes casually dropping crazy short films in a short film informative video, crazy!
That's how we do it 😎
Superb
Thanks!
Cool. Just found your channel. I have everything i need for my Short film.
Working on the Script and all the details.
Planning to shoot this year!
Thank you for your comment! We're happy for you keep it up! Let us know how your project evolves; we'd love to hear more about your short film.
Best of luck with the script and the shoot this year!
Fantastique 🎉
Merci!
Great video! What about sd cards? Should it be v30, v60 or v90?
Thank you for your comment! For cameras shooting 4K at 120fps in 10-bit, a V90 SD card is essential to handle the high data rates. If your camera shoots 4K at 60fps in 10-bit, a V60 could work, but we recommend a V90 for better reliability and future-proofing. That said, it all depends on the specific camera. Check the manufacturer’s recommendations on their official website. 🙂
@Nomad_Productions_Official thanks for the tip. Right now I've been shooting at 4k 10bit 24fps. I have a Panasonic gh5
Do I NEED to have a filter?
If you shoot outside or in bright conditions, you need an ND filter to keep your shutter speed low or to keep your aperture open to have a shallow depth of field.
When shooting inside, it's more of a quality of life improvement as you can easily turn the filter to adjust your exposure.
@Nomad_Productions_Official thank youuu