Lindsay McLean
  • Home
  • About
  • Video
  • Photography
  • Graphic Design
  • Digital Art
  • 3D models
  • Video Services
  • Marker and pencil work
  • Games
  • Acrylic Painting
  • Comic
  • Lucid Dreaming (Game)
  • Blog

Getting Started: My First DSLR

3/26/2020

1 Comment

 
Picture
My first DSLR camera, as the cheesiest selfie.
So you want to get into video! Congratulations!

Filming, editing, crafting stories - videography has it all. It's an exciting hobby or profession, with so many niche job roles and technical skills. It will take years to completely master any one aspect of the process. And it's just fun.

Getting your first camera can be daunting; social media, online forums and blogs are littered with camera comparisons and detailed technical specs that can be hard to understand at first. It's a sea of information that you can quickly become lost in.

So I'm not going to tell you what camera you should get. That's very much up to you and what you want to shoot. Youtube videos, wedding video and photography, professional interviews, broadcast quality documentary: These all differ quite a bit in style, equipment, workflow and execution.

My first camera was for me and my own personal projects. Later I also picked up short contracts and gig work while working professionally as a videographer then animator, and video editor.

My first camera lasted me years, and paid for itself 10 times over, and most importantly allowed me to experiment and grow my style. Because at the end of the day my biggest take away is:

​Get the camera you can afford that works for you now, and just start making.

Start doing, practice practice practice!

My first camera was a Canon Rebel T5i, I got this identical package deal from amazon with a starter stand, batteries, and cards. I was a college student with limited funds and snagged the $500 deal on a Black Friday discount. I was stoked, at work I would use a 5D MKIII which is a several thousand dollar camera, and felt so frustrated I didn't have something to shoot with at home. It didn't need to be fancy, but I wanted something with a similar layout and menu, that I could use with the same photo and video editing software I did at work.

Picture
I was so proud to call this little camera mine.
​
And honestly, that was the best decision I ever made. This camera helped me practice my photography, something that wasn't as much part of my job as a videographer, and improve my video compositions, 
Picture
Picture
Some of my earliest portrait work on the left, to a few years later improvement on the right; playing with light and prisms
​Those skills really served me later when I got into wedding photography.
Picture
Much better! and yes, this was taken with that same camera.
Some of my favorite personal videos I've made today, were done with this little camera:

#PCH from Lindsay McLean on Vimeo.

And these are just some of my favorite highlights. It took a lot of practice and doing a lot of different things. Playing with shutter speed and taking plenty of blurry light photos.
Picture
Embrace the process, be a little cringy.
Have a tool to find what you want to do. At work I was making marketing videos for the University I went to, but what did I want to do after that? I definitely wasn't sure yet, but if a friend asked if I wanted to make a Behind the Scenes video for his shortfilm?

The Cleaner: Behind the Scenes from Lindsay McLean on Vimeo.

Sure why not! Let's try something new.
Because you're not going to learn about what you want to do 1, 2 or 5 years down the road if you're not making silly stuff just for you, too.

San Diego from Lindsay McLean on Vimeo.

Clients still mention this video after I send them my reel sometimes. Then I remember this is up there and still public.
Picture
The T5i itself, taken with my new camera.
At the end of the day art is about experimentation. Get yourself the tool that gives you the flexibility to do what you want to do.

​Then do it.
Picture
1 Comment
    Picture

    Author

    Seattle, WA Video Nerd that likes working and chatting all things video and story.

    Archives

    March 2020

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

      Sign up for email updates!

    Subscribe to Newsletter

About

Contact

Work examples

Photography

Video

Digital Art

Games

3D Models

What I have to offer

Video Services

Graphic Design


© COPYRIGHT 2015. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
  • Home
  • About
  • Video
  • Photography
  • Graphic Design
  • Digital Art
  • 3D models
  • Video Services
  • Marker and pencil work
  • Games
  • Acrylic Painting
  • Comic
  • Lucid Dreaming (Game)
  • Blog