Cinematic Sushi - Azumi Restaurant in Toronto

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  • Опубліковано 16 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 10

  • @BillyVisuals
    @BillyVisuals Рік тому +1

    Oh man now I want sushi! Great job @MattChungz, clean visuals 👌

  • @petrinahuang
    @petrinahuang Рік тому +2

    This looks delicious 😋

  • @gregholland11
    @gregholland11 Рік тому

    Pretty neat edit. One suggestion - with your moving shots (like in the opening sequence), add an ND filter to bring your shutter speed way down. Using a fast shutter speed makes for less smooth motion, and with those closeup panning shots a little bit of motion blur might make it smoother.
    The flame shot was nice, audio effects were clean, and the ending shot was beautiful

    • @mattchungz
      @mattchungz  Рік тому +1

      I follow the 180 degree rule and actually never adjust my shutter speed unless I’m shooting in a different frame rate. I filmed a lot of these clips at 60fps for the option to slow down and so frame rate would’ve been 1/125. I didn’t use ND filters here only because the lighting in there was pretty low and so I had to setup multiple lights. Not sure what it could be if there’s a lack of motion blur…maybe the fps filmed versus the exported has something to do with it. I know in Premiere it should be automatic or you can transcode the footage. I used Final Cut for this and I’m still pretty new with it versus Premiere so I could be missing something.
      Thanks for sharing a great tip and for the feedback!

    • @gregholland11
      @gregholland11 Рік тому +1

      @@mattchungz Here's another really good video explaining it: ua-cam.com/video/LcDE-gJxhS8/v-deo.html

    • @mattchungz
      @mattchungz  Рік тому +1

      Wow very interesting! Going to look into this further and test it out. Thanks for sharing this!

    • @gregholland11
      @gregholland11 Рік тому +1

      @@mattchungz Yep yep! Key takeaway is that if you're gonna slow footage down to match your timeline framerate, you can follow the 180* rule. If you're going to DROP frames to make it match your timeline (e.g. putting 60fps footage in a 30fps timeline but keeping it normal speed), then you want to film in the framerate that is 2x your TIMELINE fps.
      Even simpler version:
      Film everything at 1/50th or 1/60th shutter unless its slow-mo.
      If slow-mo, then follow 180 rule for your fps.

    • @SnoringVids
      @SnoringVids 7 місяців тому

      Thank you both for this knowledge! I notice a tiny stutter in the beginning of a few of your videos matt in this one it was a couple before the 15 second mark. It's hard to pinpoint and maybe it's a UA-cam or an issue with our Internet at the moment but i wanted to let you know in case it's an issue with the video or compression. I am still having issues with poor quality uploads to UA-cam..

  • @NenadSapungin
    @NenadSapungin Рік тому

    Sweet video! Your editing skills are next level. New sub here 👍🏼 out here supporting small channels like mine!

    • @mattchungz
      @mattchungz  Рік тому

      Much appreciated thank you 🙏