I'm looking to get a POV camera to supplement my street photography and make a BTS video with it.
The obvious choice is of action camera, which open a pandora box of comparisons between latest Gopros or DJI action Cam 5 or Insta 36 Ace pro, or just get an old Gopro as that might suffice the purpose.
Another option is to get a 360 camera like Insta360 x4 which will eliminate the need to align the horizon and framing.
Looking to hear from you guys on this topic that might help me in the decision making.
With a 360 degree camera you would be recording yourself as well, and if you crop away, it's just a waste of megapixels. It's better to mount a cheaper action cam on your hot shoe. I'm sure horizon leveling would be a trivial job.
I've tried hot shoe mounting. It's not a good idea. Firstly because you only get to see a bts when you lift up the camera and not before that and when a moment comes up to click, you first have to start the recording on gopro first which may lead to miss the moment
Quote from: Monster on October 07, 2024, 11:16:29 AMI'm looking to get a POV camera to supplement my street photography and make a BTS video with it.
The obvious choice is of action camera, which open a pandora box of comparisons between latest Gopros or DJI action Cam 5 or Insta 36 Ace pro, or just get an old Gopro as that might suffice the purpose.
Another option is to get a 360 camera like Insta360 x4 which will eliminate the need to align the horizon and framing.
Looking to hear from you guys on this topic that might help me in the decision making.
When you say "make a BTS video" did you mean a video of the still photo being taken - that it pointing towards the target subject Or did you mean a video of you (the person) taking the still shot - as in "watch me in take the shot you are about so see" sort of thing?
I guess if the photographer is supposed to be in the shot, then a 360 degree camera on an 'invisible' stick makes sense. However it makes the photographer even more conspicuous in street photography.
Quote from: DeepakS on October 09, 2024, 11:00:55 AMQuote from: Monster on October 07, 2024, 11:16:29 AMI'm looking to get a POV camera to supplement my street photography and make a BTS video with it.
The obvious choice is of action camera, which open a pandora box of comparisons between latest Gopros or DJI action Cam 5 or Insta 36 Ace pro, or just get an old Gopro as that might suffice the purpose.
Another option is to get a 360 camera like Insta360 x4 which will eliminate the need to align the horizon and framing.
Looking to hear from you guys on this topic that might help me in the decision making.
When you say "make a BTS video" did you mean a video of the still photo being taken - that it pointing towards the target subject Or did you mean a video of you (the person) taking the still shot - as in "watch me in take the shot you are about so see" sort of thing?
Primarily the subject matter to be shot. Not a great fan of myself :D
Well, I guess you can use the loop recording mode and start a new loop after each 'recordable' moment.
Quote from: Nishit Dave on October 09, 2024, 06:00:42 PMWell, I guess you can use the loop recording mode and start a new loop after each 'recordable' moment.
What do you meant by that?
These action cameras can record clips in a loop - the file of predefined duration gets overwritten continuously. So you can start a loop clip while you're looking for a photo opportunity, and then once you take a photo, you end that recording and start a new one.
In this way, you will have a BTS clip for each photo you take without having to waste time with starting a recording when the opportunity arises.
So the clips which is 'Stopped' , get finally onto the SD card and others are discarded ?
I believe there will be options to start a new loop recording or overwrite existing ones. This would be like some dash cams you can get for cars.
Just look up "loop recording + gopro" or any camera of your choice. https://community.gopro.com/s/article/How-Does-Looping-Work?language=en_US
Looks like it's more suited for one moment. When in a single street photography session, you need multiple loops after each photos, that means you any have to initiate a new loop after each image taken.
Quote from: Monster on October 15, 2024, 02:29:17 PMLooks like it's more suited for one moment. When in a single street photography session, you need multiple loops after each photos, that means you any have to initiate a new loop after each image taken.
Yes, but you can keep the loop length to be short. You can also shoot longer 'environmental' clips intermittently for your storyboard.