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People have been asking about our rig, settings, and overall setup and workflow. In the spirit of openness, we would love to share with everyone if they are interested, and as we have time.  Almost everything we have learned regarding my current setup has been found at the HV20.com forums and the cinevate.com forums. For an indie filmmaker, there are three key stages to producing a final video. There stages can vary in complexity and the roles that are needed to fufill them. Let’s ignore traditional film school “rules”,  if anyone would like to add to it, please feel free in the comments.

Disclaimer:

Can anyone follow this process and become an “indie filmmaker”? Yes. Will everyone do it? No. Knowing the equipment, workflow, and process is one thing, the years of experience and research put into visual design, photography, and music production all helped me understand these concepts. All the way from choosing a lens to what exporting preset for Vimeo HD. This blog post is not meant for the beginner, this is meant for someone who is familiar with the basic concepts of photography and videography. Finally, we are still learning, so nothing is set in stone, or gospel. We did not go to film school for this.

Concept/Vision 

This will be covered later on. But basiclly, think about the overall vision. What is the concept for your video? You don’t always need a script, or a shot/location list. Sometimes you can just go shoot and pull a concept out of a hat in the editing room. But, it definitely helps to think through a concept/vision. But, don’t get caught up in this! Just do something! If you have to get caught up, get caught up in the post. Hey, its what George Lucas does. Haha.

The Shoot

In our opinion, you can get “film” quality shooting with digital, with either a Red One, EX3, and a variety of cameras most of us can never bootstrap. For people who are financing films on a small budget, HV20 combined a 35mm adapter can create stunning results. For shooting, our first camera rig which consisted of just these simple components:

This is just the rig, there are many other variables to consider when getting a good image on your shoot. Try to pay attention to: zooming in enough on my 35mm adapter, lighting, steady shots, creative shots, getting all the shots you need, shooting for the edit, and the list goes on and on. On hollywood shoots, they have multiple people handling all these things. We might break some of these things (like lighting) out into separate posts.

Post Production

Shooting can be the easy part. Editing takes time, patience, revisions, feedback, and a meticulous eye.  Editing a piece usually takes me from 8 hours, on something like “Meet the Painter” and 80 hours on “Fifty People One Question”. Our background and years of experience producing and editing music allows us a keen sense for editing video. Our primary editing setup consists of:

My process usually entails:
  • Capturing the footage
  • Organizing footage to meet the concept
  • Finding the good cuts
  • Placing the cuts in the right order
  • Finding the right music (if needed)- this is VERY important to me
  • Refining cuts to music
  • Getting feedback, refining
  • Apply color grading, and various refinements - For color grading, as a starting point we usually desaturate a bit, crush the blacks, adjust brightness/contrast if needed, adjust the reds, and apply a sharpening mask. 
We have not gotten into After Effects, motion graphics or anything special at this point, so my editing and grading are pretty basic. 
That’s it for now, let me know if you guys have any additional questions!

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Comments (13)

[...] 50 people, take two November 14th, 2008 More beautiful stuff from Benjamin Reece with a follow up to 50 people, one question, New Orleans edition. This time the question moves to NYC and they try out some new gear (see his technical explanation) [...]

50 people, take two added these comments on Nov 14 08 at 2:27 pm

Thanks Holmes!

Zack McTee added these pithy words on Nov 07 08 at 12:57 pm

Dude, this is super helpful. I really dig that you are sharing such knowledge. Keep it up.

Christopher Schultz added these pithy words on Nov 08 08 at 2:55 pm

Did you have any formal training in film or is it 100% self-taught?

Stephen added these pithy words on Nov 11 08 at 10:51 pm

thank you very very much, thats was really great!

chris added these pithy words on Nov 19 08 at 11:08 am

@Stephen 100% self taught, HV20.com forums, and google for the most part.

@Chris, thanks so much man :).

breece added these pithy words on Nov 21 08 at 4:04 pm

maybe you could add what you had to pay for each part individually and in total. thanks

zin added these pithy words on Dec 02 08 at 2:39 pm

Great info! Thanks a lot!

Firat added these pithy words on Dec 03 08 at 4:07 am

Hey Benjamin - what type of microphone do you use for your HV20?

James added these pithy words on Dec 03 08 at 4:12 am

Mr. Neighborman, this is great stuff. Its kinda like a football team giving their opponents their entire playbook and then saying I dare you to beat us.

D to the La Mizzle added these pithy words on Dec 04 08 at 5:32 pm

Haha @ Damien! Hilarious. I love you how feed my cocky attitude. :)

Benjamin Reece added these pithy words on Dec 04 08 at 8:04 pm

Hey, I also wanted to know what microphone you used, and how you were able to ONLY get the people’s voices recorded and not the Ambient sound of others passing by or even the cars.

sean3 added these pithy words on Dec 19 08 at 8:32 am

I love everything I have seen so far with the deltree team. Brilliant stuff. Id you still have your old DIY adapter that Worley made, would you be willing to part with it? I would love to own that one.

:)

James

James added these pithy words on Jan 03 09 at 11:32 am

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