As our first project of the year kicks off, we started with a simple assignment. Our assignment was to create a procedure video showing school expectations as if we were going to give it to them entire school. The video had to be no more than 30 seconds, could not have a voice over, as well as include the 6-shot system.
Pre-Production
Pre-Production began with the story board. We panned out how our video was going to go, drew pictures, and discussed the ideas with our teammates on how we could get the most information in, in a fun and quick way. After learning camera set-up, my partner and I decided how we were going to incorporate all the rules, as well as the information.
Production
Production was the most fun part. We used the third hour office aid as our main actress. After finding an empty classroom we began filming our video. We initially started with a wide shot to set the scene. From there we went right into a close-up which was intended to be an extreme close up. As she takes the drink of the water, you can see of the camera focused on the background and not the subject of the video.
Medium
Close-Up
Extreme Wide
As the video proceeds on you see the camera panning following the subject around the busy scene. The video does not feature an extreme close-up as it should, and the ending shot does not look the best as we began to pan the camera again.
Post-Production
After shooting all the clips, we loaded them into Adobe Premiere. At that point we began to edit the video. As this was our first time using Premiere, editing seemed to take much longer than it needed to. Placing all the clips where they needed to go, cropping them to meet video rules, rearranging to tell a story, then adding music before final publication.
Evaluation
During evaluation, classmates had given feedback such as how adding music would be beneficial and be more appealing to an audience. The original video did not have music and was perceived as a "silent film". Another comment added was that when doing videos, still shots is all we need - we had a tendency to pan on a couple shots. Finally, we were told that the last part of the video would be better if we had positioned the camera in a different location; the shot looked too busy and made it hard to focus on just the one subject.
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