How To Make DELICIOUS Stop Motion Videos
Вставка
- Опубліковано 29 жов 2024
- #foodphotography #photography #photographer #foodphoto #studiolighting #photographytips #learnphotography #productphotography
Learn 3 easy ways you can create TASTY stop motion videos, anyone with a camera can do it and it's a great skill every photographer should have in their bag.
Complete food photography gear list for all of my favorite photography and video gear:
www.amazon.com...
The Main Camera I use for Food Photography: amzn.to/2zEsWab
The Main Camera I use for VIDEO: amzn.to/2z8E1SK
Canons BEST lens for Food Photography: amzn.to/2KV7nH0
Canons other BEST lens for Food Photography: amzn.to/2SyYpn2
My Favorite lens for Video: amzn.to/2yAhOYI
Artificial Lights that I love: amzn.to/2NvTyj5
My Video Lights: amzn.to/2zYhBnM
My Soft Boxes: amzn.to/2I9WP8f
My Grid Set: amzn.to/2U5hAUc
FOLLOW ME:
Instagram: / we.eat.together_
Twitter: / weeattogethr
Facebook: / weeattogethr
Food Photography Portfolio: skylerburtphoto...
DISCLAIMER: This video and description contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a small commission. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
4:20 The flicker / aperture tip alone was worth watching this video. Thank you for making it.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Whenever I’m feeling a bit flat for inspiration I always find watching your videos helps. You have such an infectious passion for what you do I can’t help but feel like trying to be creative so thank you very much. I’d love to see some more videos of you doing product photography I’m always interested to see about your choice of lighting. Hope you’re keeping safe and well in these difficult times - Nick
Thanks man for such kind words! Product photography is next!
This is an incredible video showing how we can merge stop motion videos with you talking normally beside.... love it, great job !! Thanks to share the technique..
Thanks glad you liked it I think it could have so many fun uses
Great to see you making videos again. To stop flicker you can use the lens twist trick. Press the depth of field preview button and then twist the lens half off. This will lock in the aperture you had set.
Thank you for this video!! So inspired and appreciative of you for taking time out to share your knowledge with us.
Super awesome tip on the “resting” aperture of modern lenses. I’ve got some manual lenses that I can use too if I want more DOF. Right tool for the job as always...
I’ve watched this about three times. So much good content. Inspires me to go create more! I especially like your combined video with the stop motion.
Awesome! Thank you!
Ohh, this is a cool concept of mixing stop motion and live action and interacting with it, like how you picked up the coffee mug. I'm new to everything stop motion and just want to dabble for fun. Thanks for the idea. Great video
Thanks for the generous sharing, tho i just start watching this video
Not much channel really teaching the photography skillset/lighting these days, instead talking about the hardware.
You can set a closed down aperture, press the aperture preview button, then either unscrew the lens slightly or remove it and put some thin tape over the contacts.
This is so much better than expected! Like wow! Okay I'm going to be doing this for the rest of the week, Thank you so much!
I just love your videos! Thank you for sharing. Excited to try this stop animation.
Gracias por los tips. Hace mucho no te veía, pero estoy de vuelta. Thank u, you are the one!
i've been watching your videos non stop for the past hour lol thank you for all the amazing tips and details
So glad to see you back. Thanks for sharing BTS! I just begin to try stop motion videos for my small client, though not food, principles apply, very helpful. Its fun, but to build a good one, really needs some good story board for planning, and like you said,... be very careful about not touching anything to make a movement....
Amazing! Thank you for another great tutorial bud
your stop motion tutorial very detail, superb !
This is really very inspiring video about how to create awesome stop motion video. Thank you for sharing. Really loved this.
This video is so informative and inspiring that I'm going to watch it again!!!
Amazing! I love this video and many more of you! Thank you! 💙🙏🏼
i have to say , i love your stuff absolutely brilliant .
I discovered your you tube channel yesterday and i saw all your videos, you are so funny !!
The king of stop motion 🛑
For the flickering thing you mentioned :
Basically All Auto aperture lenses after taking a picture, goes back to their widest aperture then reads the aperture from the camera and comes back to it.
For example. A F1.2 Lens is at F2.8 for a picture. when you take a picture, lens takes that picture @ F2.8, then opens the aperture to F1.2, then it reads from camera that F-stop is @ F2.8, so it comes back to F2.8 because of this auto nature of these lenses, we see flickering. But as you said whenever you use any Manual lens, you don't have this problem because in manual aperture lenses camera and lens can't communicate with each other.
So inspiring as always!
Awesome, never thought to add live action into SM like that. Love the added interaction it brings. Thanks for sharing.
Amazing video as always man. Thanks. Where did you buy that light blue background? I want to buy one, any suggestions?
On amazon somewhere
I needed this creativity today. You did a fantastic job of explaining the stop motion. Thanks bro! Now I'll go create a stop motion with my 10 yr old son's Star Wars figures. This should be cool. :)
Loved the aperture tip! Was always wondering why it did that!
Glad it was helpful!
Since you're already using Capture One, you can select all of the images in your timelapse and have Capture One "fix" the exposure. That will do a pretty good job of removing the flicker. You can see a test of that on my channel, the only 2 videos I have on the channel are a flickering timelapse and that same timelapse deflickered with Capture One (warning, the music is a bit loud on them, sorry).
Will definitely give this a try, looks really cool and something fun to do while stuck at home. Thanks so much for this video!
Love it! Among the top tutorials on Stop Motion in UA-cam.
wow..u make it seem easier...i really had fun watching your clips...
Glad you enjoyed!
This is a great video and I learned a lot. Thank you.. i have on question though, i have tried to do the stop motion technique at the beginning in your video with you talking on the other side. I faced a problem, how did you managed to color grade both photos and the video and combined them in on shot, i shoot raw and log. Please i would be thankful if you answer this question. Thank you.
Great Video! I'm confused on how you are able to have both of your hands in the video like with the pear and the onion. Are you doing a continuous burst? But even with that the onion goes from whole to sliced as does the pears. It doesn't look like you typically respond to comments but if anyone has an answer or can point me to a tutorial on it, I'd appreciate it!
Very cool style! Thanks for sharing the work with the community!
Cool channel & content. Just found your channel recently. Thank you for sharing your talent with us.
wow i love your style and stop motion for your self and the table :D really amazing, thanks for learning it to us, amazing work as usual
dude, this is INSANE! Thank you for this video!
Sold. I will incorporate this technique in my videos in the future!
As usual, very informative and lots of new information. I admire your skills! If photography was a game - you beat it, Skyler. 😀👍
Amazing as always! GOOD JOB, you are one of my favorites! :-)
Love this video! Going to try this soon for our coffee shop!
Awesome vid! LOVE ur creativity in combining videos and and stop motion :) how ever I'm curious with your choice of using photoshop in the workflow, rather than placing the photos directly to premiere as group. Is there any advantages in doing that?
tons of work, worth it, love it
This is a great idea. I'll have to try this.
I love your videos. Very inspiring 👍👍
Great! What frame rate do you edit in? And, the live action portion is done with pictures too? I mean because the video image doesn't exactly match with the photo image, because of compresion and blur and so on. Thanks!
I edit on 24p timeline most of the time. I’m not sure I understand the other question. But the live action was shot with video and the stop motion with pictures.
I gonna take 5 min and just appreciate how well done this video was :-D Great work mate :-D
Lots of Edelkrone kit. Great video
Love this! When you “cut the pears”, do you have the camera on a timer? I also feel like I’d need a person putting the cut pears in my hands, or I would move them to a different spot while getting them. You do it all by yourself? 😃
Really cool! Thanks for these great tips!
your energy just jumped on me
Amazing content! I'm just in doubt how about the light set-up for video/stop motion at the same time (with masked frames). You must use the same LED continuous light for both video and photo, right? Do not use Flash light for photos. Otherwise I think it would be a problem for color/light matching. Correct me if I'm wrong please. If so, which LED continuous light you've been using? Thanks for your great content!
I am using constant lights for the waffle video and an Elenchrome 500w HDPro for the salad stop motion. However for the mix of live action and stop motion I was using a constant light as yes I believe there would be a major difference. For one I would have to switch lights to match my daylight balanced strobes, I couldn’t say shoot the stop motion video with strobe light and then film the live action with the modeling light. However, if you have a good light source that is consistent color/power wise then shooting just a stop motion (without live action) can be done with either. I hope I understood your questions correctly.
@@skylerburtphotos thanks a lot for reply. Exactly what I've thought.
@@skylerburtphotos Great video!! I have been trying something similar but there is a lot of difference as to contrast and color between the still images and the video. I shoot with a Canon 5D mark iv and, setup with constant LED lights. I shot the still in jpeg and raw and tried to use the jpegs but the color and contrast is way different than the video footage so my composition with the mask does not look good. How do you manage to have them look the same? Are you making color corrections in Premiere to make them match? Thanks for your answer!
Your videos are great. Keep it up and thank you!
Супер, я в восторге от твоих работ, очень крутой канал, полезное видео, спасибо тебе за твою работу
Brilliant!.... thank you for sharing
this is so helpful 🌸 thank you
your trick is awesome dude
Fantastic video! Thank you so much! What is that overhead filming horizontal Bar / Stand thing called at 09:15?
You mean the C-Stand I guess?!
@@jimvh7557 thanks for that! 😊
Very cool work!
i loveddddddd thank you for sharing so many valiable tips!!!
That was nice
Thanks
For leveling camera in 90 degree position(which I've done alot), Its better to use smaller leveler and level your camera through the screen and not through visor cap.(however camera's gyroscopes mostly failed) there are some hot shoe leveler which I usually use it. I just put it on my camera LCD except hotshoe. there are spare tripod leveler as well.
Yay stop motion
This guy is really good.
Great video! Question, what’s the name of the adapter/mount you got to mount your camera onto the c stand arm?? The one like looks like it’s 90 degrees at 9:12. The round silver piece to put the thread into. Looks like you have two of them? Looking to get the same kind so I can attach my camera to shoot down. Thanks!
very creative !! thank you for making this video ^^
or use LRTimelapse to fix flickering then can use any aperture you want
so cool i built my editing computer too. i didnt want to buy anything when i could build a monster 10x stronger for half the price. thank you for making thing video ive been looking to do this for a company i film commercials for.
Loved loved loved it!
u are the best thanks alot for your tutorial
Great tips
Awesome video, thank you! :D
so helpful. thank you!
You can choose an F stop and then "unlock" your lens from the body just enough so the camera have no connection with the lens.
Great video! I really appreciate what you're doing and all just by yourself :). I see that you have windows, so I guess you build your own PC, I am curious about the specs and components because it seems to work fast in Adobe programs :D. Thanks!
Cheers, I wanted to do a video on my PC build, but then thought it might be too boring. It's an AMD Ryzen 9 3900x with a 2080Ti and 32gb ram
@@skylerburtphotos thanks mate! It's not boring, I would totally watch it 😁. Wow, that's quite a GPU, do you think it's necessary such a powerful GPU? For Lr and PS mostly
Thank you , I love the video 💚💚🥺
love it hate it boy have I got work to do my bar just got raised think
fantastic!!!
Thanks for great video!
thank you for ideas...
Ur my inspiration bro
Hold on. Setting my Canon on Manual I can set a fixed aperture, shutter speed, ISO,.. Why should there be any flickering? Did I miss anything? Great video anyhow!
Yeah the difference is not about the exposure mode, but between controlling the aperture via the camera VS controlling the aperture via the lens. Even on manual mode the camera is electronically telling the aperture to move to a certain Fstop with every press of the button and then it is reset back to its resting aperture which for Canons is wide open and for Nikon I believe is the opposite. Where the Fujifilm lens I showed has a aperture ring on the lens, so for Fuji the aperture remains in the exact same position between pictures. It is the movement of the aperture from its resting position to the Fstop you selected and back again which causes the flickering because it’s not 100% precise. You would probably never notice it when taking photos regularly, but will definitely notice it if you take one after the other as in a time lapse or stop motion.
@@skylerburtphotos Wow, I learnt something new today. Thank you so much!
this video just made me not wanna do the stop motion thing. so confused...any beginners guide anywhere?
Hello, good afternoon, what material do you use for the infinite background?
Thank you
Awesome!
you can just import the images inside the folder to premier pro as sequence =)
great tutorial!
which table or base do you use to put your backgrounds?
What is the name of the mount above your table you had put your camera on?
You would save so much time and hassle if you just import the images directly into Premiere as an 'Image Sequence' rather than going via Photoshop and having to drop your quality to a JPEG which inly supports 8-bit colour depth
Also to reduce 'flicker' which is a nightmare in timelapse too, you can 'detach' your Canon lens once setup, and the camera then stops moving the aperture blades (not possible with Nikon), you can also reduce flicker with tools in After Effects (effects CC Wide Time and Echo), or go via LRTimelapse which has an excellent 'deflickering' process
What is the equipment when attaching cam to the top bar?
wow!!!! nice nice!!! thank you
Thanks a lot that was quoit amazing
would love the link to food styling stop motion...
Tried this and worked great. Now when I uploaded it on Instagram it adds a black frame before every loop. How can I fix that?
Awesome 👌🏼
Is the godox 60w being used in these softboxes?
Amazing..put a lot of efforts