Nice video, Tom! We're really living in a golden age for the indie film-maker or videographer. So many tremendously useful accessories and rigging options are available to people today that would have been completely out of reach just a few short years ago in terms of cost.
He'd get more likes if he post himself reacting to his own videos because UA-cam loves people that just steal other clips and film themselves just sitting and watching.
Oh wow. Glad to see you're still making vids, Tom. I was such a huge fan of your channel but I havent been recommended any of your vids for years. The algorithm is very broken.
A turn table turns the object and not the camera which will work as long as the object you are filming isn't affected by movement. If you are getting a shot of something that will move like liquid or the example I show of food falling on the plate then the only way to get that shot is to move the camera and not the subject of the shot.
Lighting will also scatter differently depending on whether the lights are mounted on the moving “bridge”, or if they’re placed elsewhere and immobile. This is a very cool amount of creative visual control.
Enjoyed. I'm going t build something like this using a large steel Chinese restaurant "lazy susan". It sits flat on the table so should not be much balance issues. They come as big as 3' diameter.
I’d still like to have a motor option. I get that it’s a big setup and would need to be careful having a weighted arm whipping around, but there are times I’d like consistent speed between shots.
Only works if the product can stand by itself, it is needs support, you'll see the support when the camera reveals it as it ventures around thr back of the product.
A turn table turns the object and not the camera which will work as long as the object you are filming isn't affected by movement. If you are getting a shot of something that will move like liquid or the example I show of food falling on the plate then the only way to get that shot is to move the camera and not the subject of the shot.
Nice video, Tom! We're really living in a golden age for the indie film-maker or videographer. So many tremendously useful accessories and rigging options are available to people today that would have been completely out of reach just a few short years ago in terms of cost.
it's so sad to see this channel is still ate 350K subs after all these years while providing tons of awesome reviews and techniques !
He'd get more likes if he post himself reacting to his own videos because UA-cam loves people that just steal other clips and film themselves just sitting and watching.
@@davidlovephotog2 🤣 yup pretty much
I think this has greatest value when the background needs to be preserved and moving itself.
so waht is wrong with rotating the product unless it is bulky big heavy
Awesome 360 camera rotating
@tomantos helpful video Tom. for the additional lights that could be mounted what recommendation you have?
hang a monitor on it for the 'adjustable background' virtual greenscreen pics and motiion a plus
Oh wow. Glad to see you're still making vids, Tom. I was such a huge fan of your channel but I havent been recommended any of your vids for years. The algorithm is very broken.
Yes the algorithm favors many click bait or main stream content. Thank you for stopping by to watch my new video and for the nice comment!
As always much love tom 😍😍
This is nice 360 rotating camera
For liquids yes, but it still shows reflective light changes🤣, but it looks a lot more classier than a turntable and it’s manual👍🏽…
Honestly, this is a more complicated turn table, am sure the result will be similar if not the same.
A turn table turns the object and not the camera which will work as long as the object you are filming isn't affected by movement. If you are getting a shot of something that will move like liquid or the example I show of food falling on the plate then the only way to get that shot is to move the camera and not the subject of the shot.
Lighting will also scatter differently depending on whether the lights are mounted on the moving “bridge”, or if they’re placed elsewhere and immobile. This is a very cool amount of creative visual control.
Hello, what wireless transmitter on the camera are you using? Thank you
Enjoyed. I'm going t build something like this using a large steel Chinese restaurant "lazy susan". It sits flat on the table so should not be much balance issues. They come as big as 3' diameter.
Post a video of it. Would love to see it
I’d still like to have a motor option. I get that it’s a big setup and would need to be careful having a weighted arm whipping around, but there are times I’d like consistent speed between shots.
That could be easily added
Sweet 😋
I think it’s easier to spin the product rather than the camera. The moving shadows adds to the character.
Sometimes the product can't be moving like when it has liquids, gases or easily moving parts.
It's different effects, for people or real backgorund, for example.
Only works if the product can stand by itself, it is needs support, you'll see the support when the camera reveals it as it ventures around thr back of the product.
Im planning to use this with the Pocket 6k g2, the camera and lens weight 2.4kg. would it be too much weight?
How can I get from Bangladesh and what is the price of this product, please give details
would be great for a matrix tomato shot 😂
Cool
Why not just rotate the product?
why not only buy a eletric cheap turntable?
I really don’t see much of a difference between this and a lazy suzy
Very little, only if you NEED the product to be stationary.
A turn table turns the object and not the camera which will work as long as the object you are filming isn't affected by movement. If you are getting a shot of something that will move like liquid or the example I show of food falling on the plate then the only way to get that shot is to move the camera and not the subject of the shot.
@@TomAntos I agree that the tomatoes would fall a little differently, but the general atmosphere would be the same i think 🙂
also you can't rotate lazy suzan as fast without the objects moving or falling as you can swing the camera around with this thing
Or you could purchase the original from Glide Gear: glidegear.net/products/revo-50-360-video-camera-rotating-platform
I did try it and it works but for smaller camera rigs. The rods and the base are not as stable under more weight
@@TomAntos Understood, on ours you can attach to a c-stand or screw to a tabletop. Just crazy how quickly our products get ripped off by China.
Awesome price Glide Gear!