- 25
- 30 199
Bob Krist
United States
Приєднався 9 вер 2016
For forty years, Bob Krist traveled the world shooting assignments for National Geographic, Travel & Leisure, Travel/Holiday, Islands, and other magazines. He got into making short travel films when digital still cameras put in video capabilities, and hasn't looked back since. On this channel, he share some hard won travel and shooting tips as well as some of his short travel documentaries.
Off Season Azores: Winter in Sao Miguel: Rainy Day Roadtrip
00:00 - Intro
01:03 - Roadside Dominos
01:50 - Ceramica Vieira Pottery
03:26 - A Break in the Weather at an Amazing Museum
05:42 - Picking Pineapples
07:25 - Tea & Seafood Stew
What to do when the weather shifts in the off season on Sao Miguel? Bob takes us on an island-wide tour where we visit some indoor locations, including a pottery that has been in the same family for six generations, an eclectic museum of island history that is the work of one man, and when the weather breaks, we visit both tea and pineapple plantations. Plus we play some dominos and eat some killer fish stew...all on a winter's day in Sao Miguel!
01:03 - Roadside Dominos
01:50 - Ceramica Vieira Pottery
03:26 - A Break in the Weather at an Amazing Museum
05:42 - Picking Pineapples
07:25 - Tea & Seafood Stew
What to do when the weather shifts in the off season on Sao Miguel? Bob takes us on an island-wide tour where we visit some indoor locations, including a pottery that has been in the same family for six generations, an eclectic museum of island history that is the work of one man, and when the weather breaks, we visit both tea and pineapple plantations. Plus we play some dominos and eat some killer fish stew...all on a winter's day in Sao Miguel!
Переглядів: 405
Відео
Off Season Azores: Winter in Sao Miguel-Touring the Caldeiras
Переглядів 659Місяць тому
00:00 - Intro 00:24 - Furnas 02:01 - Terra Nostra Garden 03:21 - Lago do Fogo 04:25 - Caldeira Velha 05:51 - Sete Cidades Join Bob as he explores the three main volcanoes of Sao Miguel: Furnas, the Lake of Fire, and Sete Cidades. Explore the natural hot springs, learn the local legends, and savor some of the unique cuisine this area has to offer.
Off Season Azores: Winter in Sao Miguel Part One: The Pilgrimage
Переглядів 776Місяць тому
Off season travel means cheaper prices, smaller crowds, and usually terrible weather. But in moderate locations like the Azores, can you go in the off season and still enjoy reasonable weather? Join Bob as he re-visits Sao Miguel island in the dead of winter, and see what the off season looks like. In this first episode, Bob finds a group of religious pilgrims and follows them on their walk aro...
Beyond Siem Reap
Переглядів 1022 місяці тому
00:00 - Opening 01:23 - The Bat Caves of Battambang 01:52 - Mornings in the Market 03:04 - A Lunch Stop in Spidertown 03:38 - An Afternoon in Rice Country 05:40 - A trip to the Genocide Museum and Killing Fields A recent workshop teaching trip to Cambodia...we explore Phnom Pen, the Bat Caves, stop for a tasty treat of tarantulas in Spidertown, visit rice country, and finally, explore the sad l...
The White Horses of the Camargue
Переглядів 5644 місяці тому
A short video essay about the white horses of the Camargue and the men and women, called "gardians," who take care of them, here along the southern coast of France. Part of an upcoming, longer documentary about this beautiful and interesting area of France. Camera: Bob Krist Edit: Garrette Baird Music: Artlist.io Tech: Sony A6700 with 55-210 lens, DJI Pocket 3
Return to French Polynesia: Part Three--Huahine to Moorea
Переглядів 1484 місяці тому
00:00 - Huahine Island 01:21 - A Visit to a Pearl Farm 03:48 - Potee Maeva Archeological Site 04:33 - The Old Coral Fishing Weirs 05:21 - Taha’a and its vanilla plantations 08:17 - How to filet a 275 pound Moonfish 09:03 - Exploring the reef of Bora Bora 10:45 - Moorea 11:26 - Exploring the Island with a Professional Photographer 12:52 - A view from the Belvedere In the final leg of Bob's journ...
Flamingos of the Camargue
Переглядів 1665 місяців тому
A short film essay about the beautiful flamingos in the Camargue region of southern France. From a longer, upcoming documentary about the region. Tech: Sony A6700 with 55-210, DJI Pocket 3, Edit: Garrette Baird, Music: Artlist.io
Return to French Polynesia: The Marquessas: Part Two
Переглядів 1895 місяців тому
00:00 - Nuka Hiva 02:10 - Melville, Typee, and Nuka Hiva 04:36 - Tahuata 06:14 - The Marquesan tradition of tattoos 07:33 - A drive around Tahuata 10:01 - Hiva Oa, Gaugin, and Jacques Brel Join Bob as he ventures further in the rarely-visited tropical paradise of the Marquesa Islands aboard the Paul Gaugin. We visit Nuka Hiva, where Melville got the inspiration for his first, and later most fam...
Return to French Polynesia: Part One: The Marquesas
Переглядів 2,4 тис.5 місяців тому
00:00 - Intro 00:27 - Return to French Polynesia 01:59 - Fatu Hiva 03:24 - On the road the Bay of Virgins 05:38 - Arts & Crafts in Omoa 07:19 - Sunset scenic cruise Join Bob as he embarks on an epic voyage through the islands of French Polynesia, including the mysterious and little-visited Marquesas. Aboard a French ship called the Paul Gaugin, we make a two run through some of the most beautif...
What's in the Bag: The French Canal Barge Assignment.
Переглядів 5986 місяців тому
00:00 - Intro 00:35 - Which Bag? 00:58 - Special challenges of shooting a “road trip” 01:41 - The need for discretion 02:34 - What’s in the Bag? 02:55 - A 6700 03:42 - The “go-to” 18-135mm zoom 04:39 - A wide angle prime 05:13 - A normal prime 05:33 - DJI Pocket 3 07:09 - What Filters? 08:09 - Bag of extras for DJI Pocket 3 08:41 - Extra cards, batteries, etc. 09:04 - The Sticks 11:30 - Thought...
Cruising the Loire Valley in a Luxury Barge
Переглядів 6356 місяців тому
Come along with Bob on the Horizon II, a luxury canal barge with a liveaboard gourmet chef and a professional tour manager, as he and a small group of passengers explore the culture, cuisine, chateau, wineries, and countryside of France's historic Loire Valley. 00:00 - Intro 02:11 - Gien 03:32 - History of the Canal 04:15 - Chateau de Sully sur Loire 05:10 - Bourgeois Winery 06:03 - Auberge de ...
Willis Beal A Life on the Water
Переглядів 4467 місяців тому
A profile of 77 year old boatbuilder and lobsterman Willis Beal of Beals, Maine. A member of the boatbuilder's hall of fame, he shares stories of building boats, lobstering, and the living the Downeast life.
Journey of Alewives
Переглядів 7837 місяців тому
Every spring the alewives return to lakes and ponds all along the Maine coast to spawn. They are a great food source for area birds and wildlife, and a good source of bait for lobstermen. Not too long ago, they were nearly wiped out by all the dams, blockages, and pollutants in the rivers, but these days, thanks to conservation efforts like the Damariscotta Mills fish ladder restoration, they a...
Bunker: Purveyor of the Past
Переглядів 1267 місяців тому
Stevens Bunker is a maritime antiques restorer, antique weapons expert, historian, sailor, and consummate storyteller. From his old barn in Maine, stuffed to the rafters with ships' wheels, figureheads, and countless other arcane marine instruments and weapons, he leads through his life of adventure, and the wisdom he's gained from that life. 00:00 - Intro 02:05 - Being “Maine Crafty” 02:49 - D...
Seville--A Taste for Life: Around Old Town
Переглядів 7008 місяців тому
Join Bob as he explores in and around the old town section of Seville in Andalucia, Spain. Visit the Alcazar, a beautiful amalgam of Moorish and European architectural styles, walk through the largest Gothic Cathedral in the world, and explore the fascinating Archive of the Indies, where the record of Spain’s colonial exploits are housed. See the Plaza de Espana, settings for movies from Star W...
Seville--A Taste for Life: On the Tapas Trail
Переглядів 6379 місяців тому
Seville A Taste for Life: On the Tapas Trail
Seville, A Taste for Life: On the Trail of the World's Finest Ham
Переглядів 4779 місяців тому
Seville, A Taste for Life: On the Trail of the World's Finest Ham
Return to the Algarve: Exploring Faro Old Town
Переглядів 9099 місяців тому
Return to the Algarve: Exploring Faro Old Town
Return to the Algarve: Slow (and Salty!) in Tavira
Переглядів 4,3 тис.10 місяців тому
Return to the Algarve: Slow (and Salty!) in Tavira
Return to the Algarve: Ria Formosa Natural Park
Переглядів 2,4 тис.10 місяців тому
Return to the Algarve: Ria Formosa Natural Park
Return to the Algarve: A Day in Olhao
Переглядів 4,2 тис.10 місяців тому
Return to the Algarve: A Day in Olhao
Exploring the Chesapeake with photographer Jay Fleming
Переглядів 41711 місяців тому
Exploring the Chesapeake with photographer Jay Fleming
Return to Grenada: From Beaches to Mountains
Переглядів 2,6 тис.11 місяців тому
Return to Grenada: From Beaches to Mountains
Return to Grenada: Spice & The City
Переглядів 3,9 тис.11 місяців тому
Return to Grenada: Spice & The City
Return to Grenada: Sailing around the Spice Island
Переглядів 1,8 тис.11 місяців тому
Return to Grenada: Sailing around the Spice Island
Beautiful
Bob, I just finished your Video Storytelling course on The Great Courses Plus! So much great info, especially the tip of using a tabletop tripod to stabilize handheld footage! I also got a lot out of the 5 framings and 10 shots. So often my mind goes blank when I'm thinking of creative ways to sequence a scene, so that really helped. This video is also perfect for me because I happen to have both the A6700 and RX100 VII and am preparing for a trip. Somehow I had no idea that you could mount an ND filter on the RX100! Thanks again.
Hi Bob a question about lenses. When you shoot inside a house for ex, do you use lenses faster than 2.8? In other words do you use primes for this or do you get around with say a 2.8 18-50? Case scenario: I will be shooting (trying to) a mini-doc about a fisherman next spring-summer. Yesterday I did a test at home, chose a 1.4 prime but missed the zoom range. Still, I managed to underexpose 😅. Learning curve. And I hope you are having a good festivity season!
Manuel: I usually find that the f/2.8 is fast enough for most indoor situations and only use the faster primes for interviews or where I really need to soften the background. Like you, I miss the zoom more than the super wide aperture. If you shoot Sony, don't forget you have their Clear Image Zoom option, which allows you to zoom in with lossless (in video) quality. So, for instance, your 11mm f/1.8 Sony becomes like an 11-15.5mm f/1.8 zoom using the CIZ. It's super useful, especially if you map the Zoom to a custom button so you can access it easily. BTW, in this video, I shot all the pottery factory with the little RX110 vii, which is really slow but has a nice zoom, but only a one inch sensor. Sounds like an interesting project you've got going there.
@ Thanks! I hope I manage to pull it off. There is a newly PhD in marine sciences we know, who through her PhD met this fisherman who is fighting the pollution and decay of a certain bit of the coast of Sweden, so his descendants can also have a chance at living off the coastal natural resources. If that is something that interests you, you could film it and I could be your ac! In any case, I will use the gear I have, among other stuff, zv-e10 with tamron 17-70 2.8, and will leave the faster 1.4 primes for specific shots as you said. Happy new year!
@@ManuelParodiRamos Sounds like a great project and I think that's the perfect lens for it, a good combo of speed and zoom range. I'd love to help out, but it's a heck of a commute:-) Have a great '25
@@bobkrist1 for most people it is a long commute 😂. I’ll try to be organised and do it myself. Thanks for the inspiration
Finally I got to see the whole video. What nice colours those shots with the sun out! The pottery is so interesting! Wonder why they change to the women. Two generations…I guess it could be the war? In any case, I’m always astonished with all the places you manage to gain access. I think your humour is the most importantly skill I want to learn to copy!
Another beautifully informative piece. Thank you.
you are not pronouncing the towns name correctly
Thank you, I try my best, but it's hard to find guidance online.
the drone shots are stunning! I could use a dip in those hot springs to escape this NYC winter
You'd love it over there, Mic!
Once again another amazing and beautiful travel story by one of the best. I'd love to go visit.
I love the photo of the man with his staff
Fantastic! A place I have always wanted to visit and photograph.
Excellent as always, Bob!
Thanks Karl!
did you try the crunchy spiders?!😲
No, the older I get, the smarter I get in terms of eating weird foods:-)
@@bobkrist1 haha!
Looks like a beautiful adventure. What time of year was this taken?
Thanks! It was early May.
so cool to see your impressive work
Thanks, Paul, good to see you!
I'm excited to do that trip with Patrick. Unfortunately, since Pamela and I just bought a new house I had to put it off until 2026. Inspiring video Bob!
Congrats on the new house. You'll love it once you get over there. Take the mosquito precautions seriously:-)
Wunnerful!
Amazing!!!!
Beautiful essay. I can’t wait to see the full documentary.
Absolutely stunning
Amazing. The hits just keep coming. One day when I grow up I want to go to Polynesia!
watching these films feels like your books come to life. Loved this series!
Thanks, Mic! Hope all is well.
How is sailing on the Paul Gaugin? For English speakers?
Everything is done in two languages, French and English. It was no problem. Ponant is making a play for more English speaking passengers so they are very conscientious about doing everything in two languages.
nice shots Bob!
Thanks, Mic, hope all is well!
Lovely
Lovely
Beautiful work Bob!
God's world of nature up close and personal! Thank you for making it available in this form to a wide audience, much in need of reminders like this.
Beautiful place and beautiful filming.
Incredible work, beauty in motion. More, more, more!
Great to see part two, and anxious for part three. Loved the drone work, Bob....must have been a nail-biter flying while the ship was underway!
what an adventure in this episode!
how was the star fruit?!!
Delish! all the same Caribbean fruits!
I'm really enjoying your UA-cam series!
Just gorgeous! I've always wanted to go there!
Thank you so much for this video. Beautiful!
My pleasure, thanks for watching!
Do you make say 2 videos, one for the client and for you?
Yes, the client wanted a very tight, sub-3 minute edit with just music and clips, no host.
@@bobkrist1how did you deal with batteries and storage? Do you keep things separate so to speak? Back-up recordings? I guess you could fill up a whole video only with that ☺️
@@ManuelParodiRamos Every night, I back up all footage to two separate 2TB SSD drives, and I have two, double bay battery chargers and I charge batteries every night as well. I don't reformat my cards in the field unless I'm running out of SD cards. So I have three copies of the footage, one left on the card, two on the separate SSD drives.
@@bobkrist1 no time to get to the lobby and grab a glass after handing over the films! Thanks again for everything. I’m enjoying very much your courses on “the great courses”. My wife, after seeing some of this footage is getting interested in all of this and is asking if we can do the course together! That’s thanks to you!
Another tough assignment
It's a dirty job, but somebody has to do it:-)
IM IN THE NICE BRIDG SIDE WINE SHOP
Beautiful, Bob!
That music BOOMING between the spoken word was unreal. Could not watch.
I'll try to be more careful next time. Thanks for the heads up!
A lovely charming and elegant describing of this pearl i knew few weeks ago. ThankU Bob
Love it, Bob! I am heading to France next month on a river cruise job and will carry you in spirit, and some of your techniques, with me!
I´m looking at the K&F magnetic filters för my ZV-E10. Have you used them with the Sony 11mm? Do they produce vigneting?
I have used the 2-5 stop variable and the 6 & 10 stop single strength magnetics with no vignetting in 16x9 or 4:3 aspect ratio. I will say that for best quality results, the single strength NDs are best. The variable NDs are convenient, but you have to watch for that crosshatching polarization effect at some angles in a clear blue sky. You may want to look at one of their kits that includes an ND 8, 64, and 1000, as well as the magnetic ring and a 3 stop graduated (not variable) ND.
Manuel: To be safe, I'd only use single strength NDs with the 11mm. The VNDs tend to show that crosshatching earlier with ultra-wides. My 2-5 stop ND shows no cross hatching at any stop with the 18-135, but with the 11mm, after about 3 stops it starts getting weird. Go with single strength for the 11mm.
@@bobkrist1 I’ll do. The wider I have is the sigma 16 so far. But planning to get either one of the 10-18 like zooms or preferably, the sony 11. There are so many options! I’m gonna have to stand in front of more interesting stuff and try to earn some money in order to keep the hobby alive!
Bob this is a great video. Well put together and clear speaking, excellent lighting, nice examples. Happy that UA-cam suggested your channel and video. Subscribed!
Of course we are still watching. It is always a pleasure to watch your videos. And how after watching them you feel you can do anything it some kind of magic you have. What lav mic system are you using these days?
Manuel: Thanks for the kind words. For interviews and on camera where I want the mic to be discrete, I am still relying on the Picomics. The mics are so much smaller than the Rode or DJI, the receiver has a button based menu, which is easier than swiping around the screen. But these mics don't offer onboard recording (they are too small) so I only use them in controlled interview environments. picogear.com
@@bobkrist1 Your are welcome! Always a pleasure. But in this video I thought you used something different. Or maybe it was just the lav with the windmuff and not the whole transmitter as in others?
@@ManuelParodiRamos No, that little black lav on my shirt is the mic, and the receiver was on the camera. It's the Picomic. I was an early fan of their design. I don't use it outdoors with moving subjects because a lot of these 2.4Ghz wireless mics are prone to drop outs if the subject turns his back to you. But for an interview subject facing the camera, it's my go to audio. It's also very easy to pin on people...you don't have to touch them, or run wires down their shirt, which, during the Covid crisis, was often a delicate operation.
@@bobkrist1 thanks for the explanation.
Yep - we be watching!
Thanks Bob....that was really good information!
so many beautiful scenes, i can only imagine how good the food was 😊
nice to see a peak behind the scenes!
Very informative. Thanks, Bob.
Once again an amazing story shot with precision. I want to live on a luxury canal barge!