Brent, what a great contribution. Being a complete beginner this has provided an easy to understand guide to capturing and editing my adventures. I'm quite sure I will be re-watching each episode many times. Thanks for all the time, energy and resources you have shared. I'm looking forward to watching your next adventure on this channel.
Brent - thanks for putting together a very informative and comprehensive overview of how to set up the GoPro and your post production workflow. I really enjoyed this series, and I don’t even own a GoPro or do any recording when on the bike. I want to now though. Well done mate, this was great.
Glad you enjoyed it. I'm stuck in quarantine (again) in Sydney and I'm about to do a multi-part series on how to edit and post-produce motorbike videos using Premier.
Hey Brent, thanks for the awesome series, some great advice and tips there. Appreciate you taking the time to make the vids and sharing with the rest of us.
Excellent set of videos. Especially the resolution choices and why you chose them and ND filters and their effects. Nice to have a little theory behind the choices rather than the " do this , do that , job done " type of tutorial. Thank-you for taking the time on this.
Glad you are enjoying the series. Yeah, I don't like being told what the settings are, I like to understand the why and the theory. And if I don't... I like to experiment for myself to find the optimum. One thing... you will see I've done further testing and refinement on my GoPro settings (another video published later on my channel). I've now settled on a frame rate of 30fps and a target shutter speed of 1/250sec to get optimum blur without impacting stabilisation.
@@brentbat I did see that actually. I have noted it down as something to experiment with along with your initial findings. Thank you for that video too.
Thanks Brent ! I found this video extremely helpful. I am going to start experimenting with these concepts. I am using PowerDirector program which look similar but probably not as powerful as yours. I don’t have the ability to see colour spectrum on a graphic display. Thanks for doing these videos !!! I am learning so much. As a newbie to this hobby, it helps me tremendously. Cheers
Great set of videos and good to see your workflow and approach - thanks for sharing! Would be interesting to see how you mount the camera for the boot shot - approx 17 minutes into the video?
Hi there. I used a ram knuckle clamp to clamp onto the rear rack, then I had an extender arm. If you want more details, email me at brentbat@gmail.com and I can share a photo of the setup.
its probably matter of personal taste but i would set contrast and saturation to half of what you added and it would look much more tasteful. but i guess u aimed for more cinematic instead of natural look
Hey Angry Lynx Yes, colour grading is very personal. I'm finding that my own taste is constantly evolving. I'm not sure if you have seen my latest series on the Flinders, but that probably represents the grading that I'm happiest with at the moment. I guess it's like anything isn't it... the more you do it... the better you get.... the more subtle and nuanced your output becomes.
looks much better but it took me 10 minutes just to find out how to add adjustment layer :) now rendering the sequence will take 2 hours and that's before exporting. adobe... what a nightmare.
@@orpaztron That is crazy! My Vic High Country was about 17/18min long, and I applied everything to it.... colour grading, sharpening (to the gopro), vignette across the whole thing. When I came to render I didn't use preview files and rendered it in 2K @24fps and I think it was about 2 hours. Are you using a somewhat modern computer? 10 hours seems crazy long.
TRULY AMAZING RESULTS - ruclips.net/video/ENTNdFP7F9U/видео.html Thank you Brent for helping bring my moto vids to the next level... I am so happy with these simple tips!
Brent, what a great contribution. Being a complete beginner this has provided an easy to understand guide to capturing and editing my adventures. I'm quite sure I will be re-watching each episode many times. Thanks for all the time, energy and resources you have shared. I'm looking forward to watching your next adventure on this channel.
Thanks James, I am glad you enjoyed the series. Looking forward to seeing what you come up with.
Thanks Brent for a very helpful series on the GoPro, it is good getting help from a pro.
An amazing series. It has been very useful for me. Now I can post god level videos. Thank you. 🤪
Brent - thanks for putting together a very informative and comprehensive overview of how to set up the GoPro and your post production workflow. I really enjoyed this series, and I don’t even own a GoPro or do any recording when on the bike. I want to now though. Well done mate, this was great.
Glad you enjoyed it. I'm stuck in quarantine (again) in Sydney and I'm about to do a multi-part series on how to edit and post-produce motorbike videos using Premier.
Hey Brent, thanks for the awesome series, some great advice and tips there. Appreciate you taking the time to make the vids and sharing with the rest of us.
Thanks for sharing your knowledge Brent👍
Thanks Brent. Great info in some fundamentals. I’m interested in filming some riding so it’s filled in some gaps in my understanding. 👍
Good stuff. Thanks again.
Thanks Brent... I picked up a handful of good pointers there. Even though I'm sworn to Davinci Resolve, the techniques are directly transferable...
Yes, Resolve is a good editor (I have that as well). The concepts are totally transferrable. Enjoy.
Very informative and helpful for applying / editing. Thanks for sharing 😊
I love this video series. Have you covered the audio aspect?
Hi Brent, thanks I'm giving your tips a go. Cheers
Thanks for this video series!!!!!
Very informative and I defenitely will use the tips provided!!!! 👍👍👍👍
Great series - thanks!
Excellent set of videos. Especially the resolution choices and why you chose them and ND filters and their effects. Nice to have a little theory behind the choices rather than the " do this , do that , job done " type of tutorial. Thank-you for taking the time on this.
Glad you are enjoying the series. Yeah, I don't like being told what the settings are, I like to understand the why and the theory. And if I don't... I like to experiment for myself to find the optimum. One thing... you will see I've done further testing and refinement on my GoPro settings (another video published later on my channel). I've now settled on a frame rate of 30fps and a target shutter speed of 1/250sec to get optimum blur without impacting stabilisation.
@@brentbat I did see that actually. I have noted it down as something to experiment with along with your initial findings. Thank you for that video too.
Thanks Brent ! I found this video extremely helpful. I am going to start experimenting with these concepts. I am using PowerDirector program which look similar but probably not as powerful as yours. I don’t have the ability to see colour spectrum on a graphic display.
Thanks for doing these videos !!! I am learning so much. As a newbie to this hobby, it helps me tremendously.
Cheers
Thanks, mate. These videos are a big help to all looking to jump into youtube and up their game.
Informative, clear and logical. Thanks Brent!
Great set of videos and good to see your workflow and approach - thanks for sharing! Would be interesting to see how you mount the camera for the boot shot - approx 17 minutes into the video?
Hi there. I used a ram knuckle clamp to clamp onto the rear rack, then I had an extender arm. If you want more details, email me at brentbat@gmail.com and I can share a photo of the setup.
Thank! Very helpful!
nice skills , i can not find the three effect , can you share the effect
its probably matter of personal taste but i would set contrast and saturation to half of what you added and it would look much more tasteful.
but i guess u aimed for more cinematic instead of natural look
Hey Angry Lynx
Yes, colour grading is very personal. I'm finding that my own taste is constantly evolving. I'm not sure if you have seen my latest series on the Flinders, but that probably represents the grading that I'm happiest with at the moment. I guess it's like anything isn't it... the more you do it... the better you get.... the more subtle and nuanced your output becomes.
thanks for all this!!
You are welcome. You largely have forced hotel quarantine to thank. I would go nuts without a project to get my teeth into. :-)
TBH i totaly prefer first clip in comparison at 1:00
you totaly overdo colors but thats IMO ;
looks much better but it took me 10 minutes just to find out how to add adjustment layer :) now rendering the sequence will take 2 hours and that's before exporting. adobe... what a nightmare.
You know that you don't need to render the sequence before exporting. It will automatically render as it exports.
@@brentbat actually I don't...I used this time "use previews files" in exporting. 10 hours for 18 minutes in 23 fps video. so frustrating.
@@orpaztron That is crazy! My Vic High Country was about 17/18min long, and I applied everything to it.... colour grading, sharpening (to the gopro), vignette across the whole thing. When I came to render I didn't use preview files and rendered it in 2K @24fps and I think it was about 2 hours. Are you using a somewhat modern computer? 10 hours seems crazy long.
@@brentbat It's a 2020 Dell laptop (8 Giga Ram/ SSD/ intel I5 CPU. and that's after watching 5 hours of Adobe Premier how-to's...:)
TRULY AMAZING RESULTS - ruclips.net/video/ENTNdFP7F9U/видео.html
Thank you Brent for helping bring my moto vids to the next level... I am so happy with these simple tips!
Am I the only one who thinks it looked faaar worse after post production ?