Really enjoyed it on my quest 3 headset.. what I understood is that an optimal 3D camera would have the two lenses about the same width as our eyes to capture ideal depth.. obviously the iPhone cameras are close together.. as a professional do you think you'd have gotten better video with a better 3d camera? Or is the iPhone at optimal for spatial video as Apple markets it? Also could even I take such great video, or does your video look great cause you're a pro?
I'm really looking forward to the new Canon camera that they showed at CES. It's supposed to shoot 180 in 8K, which would make for some really crisp content! The iPhone gets the job done for now, but it's not very good in low light, only films in 30 fps and doesn't have any options to adjust exposure or anything else. I think you could also create a video like this with some practice. The biggest thing I learned was keeping the footage as steady as possible and trying to keep the foreground at a certain distance. I'm going to post a few more videos from the trip so you'll be able to see more examples to learn from.
This video must be watched on a VR headset otherwise it will not play properly!
Excellent. Looks superb!
Thanks! More to come soon.
Really enjoyed it on my quest 3 headset.. what I understood is that an optimal 3D camera would have the two lenses about the same width as our eyes to capture ideal depth.. obviously the iPhone cameras are close together.. as a professional do you think you'd have gotten better video with a better 3d camera? Or is the iPhone at optimal for spatial video as Apple markets it? Also could even I take such great video, or does your video look great cause you're a pro?
I'm really looking forward to the new Canon camera that they showed at CES. It's supposed to shoot 180 in 8K, which would make for some really crisp content! The iPhone gets the job done for now, but it's not very good in low light, only films in 30 fps and doesn't have any options to adjust exposure or anything else. I think you could also create a video like this with some practice. The biggest thing I learned was keeping the footage as steady as possible and trying to keep the foreground at a certain distance. I'm going to post a few more videos from the trip so you'll be able to see more examples to learn from.