Real Estate Photography: iPhone and stabilizer for real estate video? |
- iPhone and stabilizer for real estate video?
- How to speed up high-volume editing of flambient?
- Batch Editing/Color Space questions
- How do you get constant lighting?
- Looking for some advice about RE Photography
| iPhone and stabilizer for real estate video? Posted: 11 Aug 2020 10:14 AM PDT Hi guys, im new to real estate photography and i am currently in the process of working on a portfolio! I had a question about videography. I have a pretty decent camera (Canon 6D ii), but i know the video on it is pretty average at best. No 4K either. Its not bad at all but i know real estate videos tend to look pretty fancy! I was wondering if i could gather some thoughts on using an iphone and a stabilizer, such as a DJI Osmo paired with an iPhone 11 Pro Max, to shoot video? iPhones shoot 4K, slow motion, and paired with a stabilizer i have seen that they can provide some pretty impressive results! Would this be appropriate for shooting real estate videos? Or should i invest in an actual video camera/use my current Canon? I would appreciate any and all advice!! [link] [comments] |
| How to speed up high-volume editing of flambient? Posted: 30 Jul 2020 07:51 PM PDT Hey guys, I'd love to see some creative suggestions for making edits go faster - specifically for speeding up the interchange of images between Lightroom and Photoshop when editing flambient. Currently we use some variant of flambient on a handful of key or problem photos in a house, and do a single frame (ambient with balanced flash) for the each of the rest. The single frames are faster to edit because they stay in Lightroom, and speed is as important as quality for our market and margins; however, the results are relatively poor and I would love to streamline the flambient workflow to the point where it makes sense to blend every single photo in Photoshop, even if it's just a quick 50/50. I've started using actions and keyboard and mouse shortcuts to nearly automate the actual editing but the primary bottleneck is the export from LR > PS. It's under 20 seconds, but when editing 200 images, that's an hour of extra time every night I know there may be some computer upgrades that would speed this up marginally, but I'm wondering if there is a lateral solution that would make the whole process seamless. For example, is there a way to automate the importation of all the layers into their separate files all at once, rather than going one photo at a time? Could this be accomplished with a script? Or is there a way to drag multiple photos from Explorer into Photoshop as layers? I tried converting all the images to smaller TIFs to reduce the file size, and that almost halved the export time but the colors got very weird compared to the RAW, especially on darker homes. I'm running out of ideas, but I'm sure I'm not the only one to have tried to figure this out. Any thoughts? [link] [comments] |
| Batch Editing/Color Space questions Posted: 30 Jul 2020 10:36 PM PDT Hello I'm just practicing before building up a portfolio with the theta z1 for virtual tours. I've been having issues with the batch processing through the theta stitcher. It just warps everything instead of stitching it correctly but it works fine if I do one at a time but that takes more time which isn't good. Next is when I save as a jpg from a dng file it obviously changes from prophotoRGB to sRGB but that being the case everything pales and it doesn't look real just looks drab. how do I fix these issues? Also, let me know if this would be easier sovled in the 360camera or theta z1 subreddit. [link] [comments] |
| How do you get constant lighting? Posted: 29 Jul 2020 12:59 PM PDT Hi, I've recently started real estate videography, and a constant challenge I'm facing is lighting. Especially having a constant lighting. I went to a client's house and in the same room they had incandescent (yellowish) and halogen (white) light bulbs. Since the room did not have any windows to get natural lighting, it was a real pain in the ass. Also, some rooms are simply too dark and ceiling lights end up messing with the entire shot. So how do you guys get a good and constant lighting? Spot lights? Thanks a lot in advance! [link] [comments] |
| Looking for some advice about RE Photography Posted: 29 Jul 2020 02:26 AM PDT Ive posted once or twice now in other subreddits but not getting the specified answers im looking for from people who do it daily, so now im here! Looking for some information and opinions/advice of any means. Im an above average hobbyist photographer. Well versed in most things photography. Looking to dip my feet into the real estate market as it seems like good side income. I have the EOS R, with intentions of buying a R5 when more reviews come to light. I have a 70-200 2.8 24-70 f 2.8 and a rokinon 14mm 2.8 MF, Godox ad400pro, c stand and 48" modifier, ball head tripod, 6 stop ND. (I have other gear but i assume this is all i would use for RE photography) Im looking for any and all advice. Gear recommendations. Advice to get in the door and started. What kind of income can i expect?( i assume this is based on market but how do i get a general idea?) Is a drone a necessity and if so, any recommendations? Should i be looking at a hot shoe flash to avoid unnecessary post processing/layering (or how would you go about lighting a room)? Is a connect app/ trigger my best bet for these photos? Im aware a fast turn around is expected (I assume 24/48hrs), post processing to fix the angles and distortions. Im looking at the 15/16-35 f2.8 or the 11-24 f4. Tilt shifts are cool but most of the angles for real estate can be corrected post and TS lenses are only a necessity in architecture photography (correct me if anything im saying is mistaken) Any additional information is appreciated, trying to make sure i know what im getting myself into and what to expect in the long run. Thanks in advance! [link] [comments] |
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