Thursday, March 29, 2018

How to Sepia Tone in Premiere

Premiere CC offers several ways to give an old style, or old film look to your footage and color grade it to have a sepia effect.

Tint Effect

From the Effects Panel:

Video Effects > Color Correction > Tint
Choose a color to Map Your Blacks
Choose a color to Map Your Whites





Lumetri Looks

Effects Panel

Lumetri Looks > Style > Back in the Day

Drag this onto a clip (or an Adjustment Layer above your clips, if you want to apply the effect to several clips on your timeline).



Tuesday, March 6, 2018

A+ and Other IT Certifications



A+ is the go-to certification you can get if you're looking to go into IT.  It's the whole backbone of IT; the best and broadest certification you can get.

There's tons of material to study because it covers so much.

What is the exam like:
The entire exam is a multiple choice test.

Topics on the test:
* How different IPs work
* Sound options



Exam prices from the leading A+ certification group




Monday, March 5, 2018

Learn Essential Exposure Control and Movie Shooting Concepts

Aperture (also called F/stop)




Shutter Speed




ISO



An introduction to why DSLRs are special for shooting video:




Topics:

* 24 frames per second (cinematic look)
* Shallow depth of field
 

Nikon D7000 and D600 Aperture Adjustment in Video Movie Mode Workaround



The Nikon D7000 and D71000 cameras have an annoying flaw that prevents users shooting video from changing the aperture for video/movie shooting in Live View Mode. There are two possible workarounds for this:

1.  Go out of Live View, adjust the Aperture, then go back in Live View.

2. Switch from Live View in Movie Mode to Live View in Photo Mode, make your Aperture Adjustments, and then go back to Movie Mode.

The reason the camera cannot change the aperture is because it lacks an extra motor (that their expensive flagship camera do have) that allows the feature to work.

This same design flaw also affects the Nikon D300s and Nikon D600 cameras.