Lessons Learned on Videography
I’ve been hard at work trying to edit the video from our trip. There is just so much, and I am only a novice video editor. Consequently, the wait is becoming much more than I’d imagined. That is unfortunate. I wanted to share the HD underwater video with everyone. It’ll happen. I just don’t know when.
In the meantime, I’ll share this: I’ve learned a few things about making movies and shooting video. It seems as though 90% of what you shoot is rubbish. It then becomes increasingly necessary to carefully cull through all of that rubbish in order to find the few fragments of entertaining content, piece those together in an interesting way and publish the end product with a few nifty bits and pieces of post production.
So far, I have managed to extract dozens of clips from the day and night dives. But I wasted so many good shots trying to use the zoom on the camera. Great shots like the crab and eel combo (a sushi delight) are almost completely ruined because of my poor video skills.
My friend Garrett, who lent me the camera suggested that I take all the video and scale it down to one minute clips. This, I thought, would be imjpossible given the volume of video I had. But now that I look back on it, two or three one-minute clips may be all I have once it is all said and done. Hopefully, the first will be ready for release at the end of this weekend.



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