95% of the gear I use to create high-end advertising images, videos, and commercials is the highest end stuff you can buy. Tens, even hundreds of thousands of dollars in equipment and production often comes together for much of the commercial work you see. This gear all serves its purpose, and there’s good reason for every single piece of it, but….
PROBLEM: I understand that, for a huge cross section of this community, this high end gear is completely outta reach. You probably don’t own a RED camera or a fleet of Nikon D3s’. You don’t have Fisher dollies and and a Digital Asset Manager to wrangle your data after every shot. So, for a long time, one request that’s regularly come up from this community is, that when I get the rare chance, to please feature some mid range or lower end gear, some more DIY solutions, and some ways to keep things on the cheaper side while still getting cool results.
SOLUTION: Not long ago, I shot the launch campaign for SanDisk’s new line of Extreme Pro cards, and SanDisk was kind enough to let me share the “making-of” that campaign, with tweets, Facebook posts and daily videos while I was creating the work. Was the first time anything like that had been done, and it was a blast. Well, we’re back at it and just wrapped another campaign for SanDisk (images will be sprinkled throughout summer and fall). No play by play this time, but there’s another interesting twist: It was part of my assignment to shoot images with a wide range of cameras and cards for them–from point and shoot cameras with standard cards, all the way to the top of the line Nikon gear with the Extreme Pro cards, and lots in between. Totally unique approach. SanDisk were again cool with me making a behind the scenes video, and this time they even provided me with a a clean slate and some vid budget to do what I wanted. So I figured, what a perfect time to deliver on a long standing wish to marry a wide range of gear with some inexpensive and effective DIY solutions to get some cool and unique photos and to manage data. That said, we baked that down into the above video, and I’m happy to present ChaseJarvis RAW: 12 Tasty Photo + Video Tips. If you’re a pro, this vid won’t make you salivate, but if you’re an aspiring shooter, you just might pick up a thing or two that could unlock your next great picture or video.
AND: I’d be remiss for not thanking SanDisk for again backing my desire to share the black box of photography with this community. Big ups to those guys. And I’d also be remiss if I didn’t let you know that they’ve got a contest going on right now, giving away several thousand bucks to inspire your best summer shots. Check it out.
Lots of behind-the-scenes photos, some snapshots, and…alert for gear freaks…and entire gear list after the jump
Here’s a shot of the talent on Mission Beach, San Diego. Sunset.
Yours truly setting up the remote Nikon D3s with PocketWizards using a magic arm.
Snapshot of Erik’s point and shoot attached to the skateboard. Good for shooting P.O.V. stills or HD video.
“Poor Man’s Dolly”. A Nikon D90 on a cotton hat, sitting on a skateboard makes for an impromptu dolly.
Sweet kickflip frontside varial heelflip from Chad.
Fitting Brandon with the Contour HD helmet camera.
A fancier “poor man’s dolly” built with PVC and skateboard wheels.
Grabbing a p/s snapshot of talent behind the scenes.
Yours truly with the no-look skate shot.
And here’s the gearlist extravaganza…ng>
- Canon PowerShot S90
- Nikon D3S
- Nikon D90
- ContourHD 1080p with flat surface mount
- Nikon 14-24mm f2.8 AF-S
- Nikon 16mm f2.8 Fisheye
- Nikon 24-70mm f2.8 AF-S
- Broncolor Verso Pack
- Broncolor Unilite Head
- Broncolor P70 Reflector
- Nikon SB-800
- SanDisk 16GB Ultra SDHC
- SanDisk 32GB Extreme Pro CF
- SanDisk 16GB Extreme HD Video
- SanDisk 16GB microSDHC
- SanDisk 16GB SDHC
- Manfrotto Super Clamp
- Manfrotto Variable Friction Magic Arm
- Gtizo GT3531 Carbon Fiber Tripod Legs
- Gitzo 3780 QR Tripod Head
- Pocket Wizard Plus II Transceiver
- Pocket Wizard N90M3-P Pre-Trigger Motor Cord
this is great!!! tnx for the tips =]
At first i thought i didn’t learn anything from this video and, as you said at the end, you owed me one. But today i was shooting at a small, really really small open air festival in my hometown… (of course i was doing it for free because i have an opportunity to shoot many many things during this one or two days which is a good learning experience for me + I’m still not a pro). So i was using a no-name 16GB SD card in my D90, and i shot about 600 images already and then i wanted to shoot my friend/the head creator of the event as she was walking towards me. I press the release button and nothing happens. I look if i didn’t turn the camera accidentally off but it was on, and then I noticed that my back LCD said that there is some problem with the SD card and that i should either format it or use another one. I had a back up but that was just for the case that I filled the first one up. So i cursed like mad because I shot those 600 images which no one would give back to me. And right then and there I remembered this video and swore to myself that i would never ever use no-name SD cards, and i also remembered a saying used in my country: “We aren’t rich enough to buy cheap stuff”.
So thank you for teaching me not to save on the important aspects of photography.
Thanks Chase, great tips and its really great to see what can be done without the $10000 set ups and still making fantastic images ….. fabulous
Love it, wish i lived near the beach/skatepark 😛