Steve Maskery
Established Member
Well you are right to suggest that the quality of the material is paramount, but the image quality really does matter if I want to appeal to the widest possible paying audience.There is another reason, too. My SD camera uses mini-DV tapes. So there is a motor in the camera, and because the camera itself is very small, it is not possible to separate the motor and the microphone by very much. So the tape records the noise of its own motor. I'm told that that is particularly intrusive to people who use a hearing aid, and whilst I don't specifically target mature gentlemen, they are a significant part of my fan-base, simply because woodwork is a popular hobby for retired people!Lons":14nw6csd said:Hi Steve
Is it strictly necessary to film in HD? My thoughts are that it wouldn't make a lot of difference to the average woodworker as long as its decent and from what I've seen of your clips there's nothing wrong with the quality.
Bob
It's true that my later films were filmed and lit more professionally than the first couple (I was learning my craft from scratch, with virtually no guidance), but even the later, better, ones fall short of television standard, which is what I'd really like.