I have a question! Shooting a game in the sun I want to use 24 & 60 but I have to crank up my shutter speed because it’s so bright. What do you usually do? Thank you!
Hey! That’s a great question. So safest bet would be to use ND filters. That way if you’re shooting in either 24 or 60 you can keep your shutter speed at 1/50 or 1/125. I’m going to be honest with you..I’ve never owned a ND filter and I always take the shutter speed to the max. I like shooting at 2.8…you can see some of the footage here is in the middle of the day. Honestly no one is going to say anything haha. But the “technical” way would be to use ND filters…but who needs rules sometimes ya know. Lmk which route you end up going!
Just now found your videos I’m thinking about doing sports videography but I have a canon rebel t5, do you think I should switch to Sony & get a camera from them or stay with canon & buy some lenses & buy a new camera later on?
I'm a big advoicate of using what you already have. if you have the means to buy a new camera and new set of lenses by all means; but if you're just starting out and need reassurance.. a t5 is more than enough
Thank you Saul for the quality video it was surprising how hard it was to find recommendations for the video side and not the photography side. Question do you use a cage or gimbal to stabilize your shots or do you just use the camera body itself
Hey Isaac! Thanks so much! I'm putting together some more sports videography tip videos so look out for them in the near future. Yeah so it's a combination of gimbal (DJI Ronin-S) and handheld shots. The football workout with David had a good amount of gimbal shots. All the basketball footage is shot handheld. Depending on the shot I'll add some warp stabilizer within premiere pro as well
@@SaulLopezVideo I think that’d be really helpful cause you talk about things that are common sense but often over looked like being comfortable in a shoot. I know myself and many others would appreciate anymore tips you have. Thank you I’m thinking about purchasing a zhiyun weebil-s as my gimbal! I love the channel and your content. I seriously think this a great resource that I found so thank you!
@@swaggmaster24243 Epic! send me some of your work on IG. Would love to see what you're creating. And thanks for the support! hope I can keep putting out helpful content for you 🙏
Really depends on the camera you have and the look you're going for. If you're on Canon maybe try checking out the Canon 24-105mm f4. You can buy them used for about $500 or so on ebay
@@ahmadelshbasy3222 honestly anything less than that isn't worth it. your best best in that case would be sticking to whatever kit lens came with your camera. As you progress you'll learn lenses are typically as expensive, if not more expensive than camera bodies. A good lens can really elevate your work even if your camera body isn't as top tier. Hope that helps!
Tips at start 2:58
Wait, this man only has 328 subs? I saw the video and the quality and I thought he must have at least 100k.
Thanks for the kind words and support! we'll get there one day!! 🙏
I'm really glad you included the first portion of this video it was really touching to look at the gallery, thank you!
No doubt! :)
I have a question! Shooting a game in the sun I want to use 24 & 60 but I have to crank up my shutter speed because it’s so bright. What do you usually do? Thank you!
Hey! That’s a great question. So safest bet would be to use ND filters. That way if you’re shooting in either 24 or 60 you can keep your shutter speed at 1/50 or 1/125. I’m going to be honest with you..I’ve never owned a ND filter and I always take the shutter speed to the max. I like shooting at 2.8…you can see some of the footage here is in the middle of the day. Honestly no one is going to say anything haha. But the “technical” way would be to use ND filters…but who needs rules sometimes ya know. Lmk which route you end up going!
Just now found your videos I’m thinking about doing sports videography but I have a canon rebel t5, do you think I should switch to Sony & get a camera from them or stay with canon & buy some lenses & buy a new camera later on?
I'm a big advoicate of using what you already have. if you have the means to buy a new camera and new set of lenses by all means; but if you're just starting out and need reassurance.. a t5 is more than enough
Thank you Saul for the quality video it was surprising how hard it was to find recommendations for the video side and not the photography side. Question do you use a cage or gimbal to stabilize your shots or do you just use the camera body itself
Hey Isaac! Thanks so much! I'm putting together some more sports videography tip videos so look out for them in the near future. Yeah so it's a combination of gimbal (DJI Ronin-S) and handheld shots. The football workout with David had a good amount of gimbal shots. All the basketball footage is shot handheld. Depending on the shot I'll add some warp stabilizer within premiere pro as well
@@SaulLopezVideo I think that’d be really helpful cause you talk about things that are common sense but often over looked like being comfortable in a shoot. I know myself and many others would appreciate anymore tips you have. Thank you I’m thinking about purchasing a zhiyun weebil-s as my gimbal! I love the channel and your content. I seriously think this a great resource that I found so thank you!
@@swaggmaster24243 Epic! send me some of your work on IG. Would love to see what you're creating. And thanks for the support! hope I can keep putting out helpful content for you 🙏
@@SaulLopezVideo thank you Saul I’ll send you some work this week!
this helped a lot !!! thank uuuu
I'm glad! Keep shooting :)
All of these are facts! Gotta wear some comfortable shoes for sure.
haha arguably the most important tip
Love the intro! Subscribed
Thank you!!
Dope bro!! This actually helps. Quick question… What software do you edit with? Final Cut Pro?
Glad it helped! I edit in Premiere Pro
This helps a lot thanks!!!!
Thanks for watching!
Can i start with 50mm and canon 200d to get good sports footages (and some photography)?
Definitely! work with what you have and upgrade as you progress. Just get creative with your angles to make them stand out
If i can only afford one budget lens , what would it be for best results ?
(Mostly indoor video shooting)
Really depends on the camera you have and the look you're going for. If you're on Canon maybe try checking out the Canon 24-105mm f4. You can buy them used for about $500 or so on ebay
@@SaulLopezVideo it’s more expensive than my camera body , and i said budget🙄
@@ahmadelshbasy3222 honestly anything less than that isn't worth it. your best best in that case would be sticking to whatever kit lens came with your camera. As you progress you'll learn lenses are typically as expensive, if not more expensive than camera bodies. A good lens can really elevate your work even if your camera body isn't as top tier. Hope that helps!
@@ahmadelshbasy3222 Everyone also has a definition of what "budget" means to them. Feel free to send me a price range and I can send you recs.
First