Posts: 32884
Location: Rhinelander, Wisconsin | We shoot on the water and on the ice hundreds of hours per year. Any good hat camera will do the job for you, learn not to whip your head around allot. It takes practice. A wide angle windshield mount camera, and one mounted to the bow light covers the rest. Immediately upon hookup, we use a camcorder or point and shoot waterproof camera to record video, so frequently we are able to get three or four perspectives.
https://www.facebook.com/video.php?v=10152806200889929&set=vb.337467...
Editing is critical to the finished product. Learn how to set the program to render your clip without compressing the heck out of it, which will make it look fuzzy and pixelated. I use Adobe Premier Pro. You can rent the program pretty reasonably. We export using the Android Tablet 720P setting and a 5 minute video is hi def, clear, and under 50 MB.
Water moving is tough on an encoding program, not much you can do there to avoid issues without a ton of training, work, and equipment. |