| White Balance Magic |
|
|
|
|
There is a secret to creating great-looking video that professional videographers know (and most amateur videographers don’t). The secret is white balance. It is the easiest, most overlooked and under-utilized feature on your camera. It is part of the formula that sets professionals apart from the amateur. There is a feature on most video and still cameras that allow you to manually set your white balance. Why is it important? Getting the correct color Ok, you’ll have to check your camera’s manual to get the instructions on how to do it, but here are the basics. First, you start by going to the location you will be shooting. Then, you need to show the camera a true white reference image that it can scan and correct the color it will output. What do you use? Well, if you don’t have anything else, you can use a plain-white sheet of paper. That will be much better than not doing it at all and making your boss look like a martian. But, the preferred method that the pros use is a white-balance card that is technically better than any object you can put in front of the camera. The benefits of using a white-balance card is output color that is very accurate and even more importantly, consistant. Color Consistancy Save Time in Post That saves me time on each and every clip that I edit. So, if I save 5 minutes on each clip, and I start with 60 clips in a DVD project, that saves me 5 HOURS per project!! So, I’m happy to have added the Warm Card system to my arsenal of tools. Did you know that even today’s most expensive professional video cameras still require a manual white balance? In fact, on a typical day’s shooting a cameraman might have to set his white balance a dozen times or more. So, if an $80,000 broadcast television camera can’t be counted on to white balance itself automatically, then it’s not surprising that your under-$5000 digital camera can’t do it either. Warm Card System Vortex Media DCP WarmCards Digital Camera Pack, White Balancing Set
To learn more about white balance, here are some good reference sites on the web: http://www.mediacollege.com/video/camera/white-balance/ http://www.videomaker.com/article/9366/ http://www.videomaker.com/article/7266/ http://www.cybercollege.com/tvp018.htm |







