For a professional with a studio, Premier Pro, or Final Cut Pro this might be useful. The "instruction" is done with industry vernacular and without explanation. Actions are shown without detail, structure, or description for the unfamiliar. This is demonstration for an intermediate user of Final Cut Pro. So much is left out about the cameras or potential engineering issues. Technology specific demonstration is rarely a way to provide general instruction unless that is specifically stated up front. Better title is "Multi-Cam Production and Final Cut Pro for intermediate users."
Multi-Camera Video Production and Post
With James Ball and Richard Harrington
Liked by 2,376 users
Duration: 4h 31m
Skill level: Beginner
Released: 2/10/2016
Course details
A multicamera setup is the next big step in video production. Multicam helps you record different angles simultaneously and shoot scenes much faster than with a single camera. It requires great planning and lighting to make sure the footage from each camera matches, but what you can't control on location you can usually correct in post. In this course, Rich Harrington and James Ball show how to organize and run multicamera video productions, and use tools such as Final Cut Pro and Premiere Pro to fine-tune the results.
You'll learn essential preproduction strategies to get the right gear and place it in the right position. You'll also learn techniques for syncing the visuals and audio captured from each camera. Rich and James offer advice for directors running shoots in the field, as well as strategies for crew members who are building sets and logging footage. Finally, in chapters 7 and 8, they share techniques for multicamera postproduction with Final Cut Pro X and Premiere Pro. In these chapters, you'll learn how to create multicam clips, apply color correction, color match angles, switch between angles, and refine and master your edit. By the end of the course, you'll have a thorough start-to-finish understanding of the multicamera production process.
You'll learn essential preproduction strategies to get the right gear and place it in the right position. You'll also learn techniques for syncing the visuals and audio captured from each camera. Rich and James offer advice for directors running shoots in the field, as well as strategies for crew members who are building sets and logging footage. Finally, in chapters 7 and 8, they share techniques for multicamera postproduction with Final Cut Pro X and Premiere Pro. In these chapters, you'll learn how to create multicam clips, apply color correction, color match angles, switch between angles, and refine and master your edit. By the end of the course, you'll have a thorough start-to-finish understanding of the multicamera production process.
Skills you’ll gain
Earn a sharable certificate
Share what you’ve learned, and be a standout professional in your desired industry with a certificate showcasing your knowledge gained from the course.
LinkedIn Learning
Certificate of Completion
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Showcase on your LinkedIn profile under “Licenses and Certificate” section
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Download or print out as PDF to share with others
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Share as image online to demonstrate your skill
Meet the instructors
Learner reviews
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A. Clayton Vandiver, Jr. M.Ed., MBA
A. Clayton Vandiver, Jr. M.Ed., MBA
Full-time PhD student to add to the MBA. MEd. & BA in Radio, TV (and film).
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Anthony Cupo
Anthony Cupo
Live Event Production Manager at 1SourceVideo | Elevating Brands Through Engaging Video Content & Innovative Live Streams
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Jesse Valles
Jesse Valles
Videographer, Media Production Professional
Contents
What’s included
- Practice while you learn 1 exercise file
- Learn on the go Access on tablet and phone