Thanks for the tips. Funny to say that people are going to think you’re skiing weird because of the way you’re holding the selfie stick… Any good skier will see that the lack of POLE PLANTING is a dead give away that something weird is going on. In my first time using the selfie stick to film skiing, this is what I realized was a flaw of this method. Well, that and skiing any challenging terrain without using your poles is definitely a lot harder.
Totally, it's really a challenge - finding a way to ski with the selfie stick that hampers your ability to ski the least, and difficult terrain is the best barometer. I only ski challenging terrain with the selfie stick attached to my helmet now because not using my poles - or holding one arm still on that kind of terrain - makes it too difficult to ski, so there's no point in filming it anyway then!
@@SkiBoyNY. I’m thinking of using a mouth mount for challenging terrain… But then it’s just a regular action cam view…. Would be cool to find a way to mount it so i could get it away from my body but in a way that doesn’t impact my head, like a helmet mounted selfie stick would.
Great ideas! I've mounted my 360 also at the front and at the back of my Snowboard. It generates another great angles and actions-shots with flying snow...
Hahah mate i've been through this same problem multiple times in the last 2 years, always with my Insta One X 2. I tried all kinds of mounts and holds, but it ain't easy to find the best/perfect one. Holding it at full extension in front or behind you produces by far the best shots, but unfortunately as a skier it is not a natural position to be in so you won't be able to ski as fast and as sexy as you would normally. I tried keeping the pole at full extension in my backpack or inside my clothes inbetween my back and my backpack, and the footage is ok. Its not the point of view i like though, coz its too high up and doesnt give you a nice full body shot. Ultimately one of the best shots i got was achieved by fitting the insta360 + pole at medium extension on a helmet that had elastic bands already pre-installed on top of it and helped keep the camera steady. All in all, the journey for the perfect insta360 ski shots continues!
The elastic band/helmet set up sounds interesting. Totally agree that it's hard to ski naturally with the pole in front of or behind you. Actually, I think it can be a challenge to ski normally no matter where the pole is because it always tends to restrict or impact some part of your normal body movement. The helmet can create a balance issue, but it at least frees your body up a bit more to move as normally as possible.
Nice video! So i kinda did the same thing but i can shorten the pole so i can plant the pole and it doesn’t move so much. My next thing is get a weight belt and attach that way
Thanks! I saw a guy at Breckenridge who may have had a similar idea to you - he had some kind of belt on with the selfie stick attached to it and angled back and up behind him. That could be a great shot!
One small problem is that the standard camera mount thread is NOT 1/4" UNC but 1/4" BSW (Whitworth: same threadform as ISO pipe threads). The difference is not in the diameter or pitch but in the thread angle. If you use a UNC screw in a BSW camera mount there may be excessive wear on parts of the thread in the camera (which is often Aluminium or polymer).
Thanks! I use the Sarmonic Blink 500 wireless mic. I plug the receiver into my phone, begin recording low res video, and place the phone in my pocket. I clip the mic to my neck warmer and usually roll the neck warmer over the mic once to provide more wind protection. Sometimes that muffles the audio a bit too much, so it takes some experimenting. Then I synch the audio from the low res video recording to the footage from the camera. When I was filming the last segment in this video, I must have accidentally stopped the low res video recording on my phone when I put it in my pocket, so I had no audio to synch. Had to rely on the audio from the camera, which has way too much wind.
@@SkiBoyNY. Yes, I was amazed by the audio quality. I've got a wireless mic too and have the receiver mounted on the Insta 360 (X2). But I haven't tried it while skiing.
Your video was very enjoyable and informative!! I saw some of your other videos first and was wondering how you got those shots. Good job on sharing your skills. I shoot videos too but I’m not as creative. Check out Skier Craig’s Travels. Do you ever get out West? I live in Las Vegas but ski everywhere. We should try to meet-up, make some turns and shoot video. We can discuss editing too. Thanks, Skier Craig
Great idea - I've placed the selfie stick vertically in the backpack and extended the camera up above for a bird's eye view, but there tends to be a lot of movement by the camera. I think the key is that the backpack needs to be on tight to minimize movement by the camera. I've also extended the selfie stick out sideways from the backpack, which provides an interesting side view too.
@@SkiBoyNY. Tried that too, and had the same issue. I then managed to lock it in position quite well, but still the shot is not as nice and smooth as full body shot from in front or behind you.
Loved this vid--I subscribed. So much work in making it happen. I've shot some skiing with the Insta360 (One X and X2). Pasting one below a combo of the selfie stick in my hand and my first helmet mount. I now have a mount that gives more standoff from the helmet, but not a selfie stick length--at all. I'd show that, but I shot it at the end of last season and haven't gotten around to viewing/editing that footage. AND... I've been thinking of how to attach the selfie stick to a pole. You came up with a really elegant solution. Buy a pair of poles at a swap meet and drill a hole in them. Really great! Did you ever try a vertical mount on the pole--so the stick aligns vertical above the grip? That would be useful too, I think. Thanks again for this great vid! th-cam.com/video/brzwmUfzELc/w-d-xo.html
Great shots and it looks like you had a lot of snow in Val Thorens! I've tried holding the selfie stick vertically - it makes it much easier to ski, but what I've noticed happening is that if the selfie stick is line up with your ski pole, your ski pole becomes invisible too. So it looks like you're skiing with an empty hand. At least that's the problem that I've had. I think the increased standoff will be fun since you'll have another type of shot to work with! My fave was the balcony shot. Very well done - I had a hard time figuring out how you were holding the camera!
Thanks for the tips. Funny to say that people are going to think you’re skiing weird because of the way you’re holding the selfie stick… Any good skier will see that the lack of POLE PLANTING is a dead give away that something weird is going on.
In my first time using the selfie stick to film skiing, this is what I realized was a flaw of this method. Well, that and skiing any challenging terrain without using your poles is definitely a lot harder.
Totally, it's really a challenge - finding a way to ski with the selfie stick that hampers your ability to ski the least, and difficult terrain is the best barometer. I only ski challenging terrain with the selfie stick attached to my helmet now because not using my poles - or holding one arm still on that kind of terrain - makes it too difficult to ski, so there's no point in filming it anyway then!
@@SkiBoyNY. I’m thinking of using a mouth mount for challenging terrain… But then it’s just a regular action cam view…. Would be cool to find a way to mount it so i could get it away from my body but in a way that doesn’t impact my head, like a helmet mounted selfie stick would.
Great ideas! I've mounted my 360 also at the front and at the back of my Snowboard. It generates another great angles and actions-shots with flying snow...
@@lichtschaffen I'm sure it's fire when you're in pow!
Love the dedication! I gotta follow your footsteps and try South America in the summer, also based in nyc
Thanks! Yes, it's so cool to leave the NYC humidity and find yourself in winter again. And then come back to the heat again!
I'm convinced you should have many more followers. Thanks!
Haha! Thanks!
Thanks for experimenting it for us !
Hahah mate i've been through this same problem multiple times in the last 2 years, always with my Insta One X 2. I tried all kinds of mounts and holds, but it ain't easy to find the best/perfect one. Holding it at full extension in front or behind you produces by far the best shots, but unfortunately as a skier it is not a natural position to be in so you won't be able to ski as fast and as sexy as you would normally.
I tried keeping the pole at full extension in my backpack or inside my clothes inbetween my back and my backpack, and the footage is ok. Its not the point of view i like though, coz its too high up and doesnt give you a nice full body shot. Ultimately one of the best shots i got was achieved by fitting the insta360 + pole at medium extension on a helmet that had elastic bands already pre-installed on top of it and helped keep the camera steady.
All in all, the journey for the perfect insta360 ski shots continues!
The elastic band/helmet set up sounds interesting. Totally agree that it's hard to ski naturally with the pole in front of or behind you. Actually, I think it can be a challenge to ski normally no matter where the pole is because it always tends to restrict or impact some part of your normal body movement. The helmet can create a balance issue, but it at least frees your body up a bit more to move as normally as possible.
People watching you go down the hill with 2 sticks 😂
Totally ridiculous! One sticking off of my head too!
@@SkiBoyNY. you just need to ride with us my guy… we just take turns filming 🤙
That'd be so much easier! Will have to coordinate sometime.
Buen video con muy buenas ideas para grabar con ángulos espectaculares
¡Muchas gracias!
Nice video! So i kinda did the same thing but i can shorten the pole so i can plant the pole and it doesn’t move so much. My next thing is get a weight belt and attach that way
Thanks! I saw a guy at Breckenridge who may have had a similar idea to you - he had some kind of belt on with the selfie stick attached to it and angled back and up behind him. That could be a great shot!
Whatcha doing for the audio?
Helpful video
One small problem is that the standard camera mount thread is NOT 1/4" UNC but 1/4" BSW (Whitworth: same threadform as ISO pipe threads). The difference is not in the diameter or pitch but in the thread angle. If you use a UNC screw in a BSW camera mount there may be excessive wear on parts of the thread in the camera (which is often Aluminium or polymer).
Great vid! Whats your set up to get a clean voice track when you are skiing? All my tests have resulted in really windy audio.
Thanks! I use the Sarmonic Blink 500 wireless mic. I plug the receiver into my phone, begin recording low res video, and place the phone in my pocket. I clip the mic to my neck warmer and usually roll the neck warmer over the mic once to provide more wind protection. Sometimes that muffles the audio a bit too much, so it takes some experimenting. Then I synch the audio from the low res video recording to the footage from the camera.
When I was filming the last segment in this video, I must have accidentally stopped the low res video recording on my phone when I put it in my pocket, so I had no audio to synch. Had to rely on the audio from the camera, which has way too much wind.
@@SkiBoyNY. geez, clean audio is a lot of work eh? It sounds good tho, Keep it up!
@@SkiBoyNY. Yes, I was amazed by the audio quality. I've got a wireless mic too and have the receiver mounted on the Insta 360 (X2). But I haven't tried it while skiing.
Now Insta 360 has solved that problem. They came out with a Pole mount. I just purchased.
I'm a no pole this would be great
👍👍👍👍👍 thank you for sharing
Why do you need poles?
I've been skiing for 20 years ... Try without them ...
Your video was very enjoyable and informative!! I saw some of your other videos first and was wondering how you got those shots. Good job on sharing your skills. I shoot videos too but I’m not as creative. Check out Skier Craig’s Travels. Do you ever get out West? I live in Las Vegas but ski everywhere. We should try to meet-up, make some turns and shoot video. We can discuss editing too. Thanks, Skier Craig
Dude where you skiing. That does not look the the east coast. Almost has a Utah feel.
Great guess! It was Snowbasin in Utah.
clip the stick to your backpack.
Great idea - I've placed the selfie stick vertically in the backpack and extended the camera up above for a bird's eye view, but there tends to be a lot of movement by the camera. I think the key is that the backpack needs to be on tight to minimize movement by the camera. I've also extended the selfie stick out sideways from the backpack, which provides an interesting side view too.
@@SkiBoyNY. Tried that too, and had the same issue. I then managed to lock it in position quite well, but still the shot is not as nice and smooth as full body shot from in front or behind you.
Loved this vid--I subscribed. So much work in making it happen. I've shot some skiing with the Insta360 (One X and X2). Pasting one below a combo of the selfie stick in my hand and my first helmet mount. I now have a mount that gives more standoff from the helmet, but not a selfie stick length--at all. I'd show that, but I shot it at the end of last season and haven't gotten around to viewing/editing that footage. AND... I've been thinking of how to attach the selfie stick to a pole. You came up with a really elegant solution. Buy a pair of poles at a swap meet and drill a hole in them. Really great! Did you ever try a vertical mount on the pole--so the stick aligns vertical above the grip? That would be useful too, I think. Thanks again for this great vid!
th-cam.com/video/brzwmUfzELc/w-d-xo.html
Great shots and it looks like you had a lot of snow in Val Thorens! I've tried holding the selfie stick vertically - it makes it much easier to ski, but what I've noticed happening is that if the selfie stick is line up with your ski pole, your ski pole becomes invisible too. So it looks like you're skiing with an empty hand. At least that's the problem that I've had. I think the increased standoff will be fun since you'll have another type of shot to work with! My fave was the balcony shot. Very well done - I had a hard time figuring out how you were holding the camera!
Don’t be drilling holes in hire poles people! 😅
well, you just destroyed the helmet
True. I'm using the helmet more as a camera mount than a protection device!