
It feels a bit more mechanical to the touch. Personally I like Fuji and BM end results. If shooting weddings or RE I would grab Canon. If shooting photos, I’d grab a FF and dream of MF. In the end you spend more on lenses than the camera. But, for what I’m shooting shallow DOF is something I’m fighting against, more often then not. Some people do like the DOF, cant deny that. Maybe smaller hungrier ones might take a paycheck but not larger ones and not larger brands as that would taint them both for a long time. I work at a company who works with large YouTubers and any with a large enough following in technical spaces wouldnt dare risk their brand they’ve spent years building on being paid to say something outside of a visibly sponsored ad. No paycheck.Īlso reading conspiratorial replies here doesn’t prove shit. These videos aren’t allowed if you’re in the Sony ambassador program, which is just providing advanced access to new cameras and lenses and going on trips for launches with Sony footing the bill. Watch this… about Nikon from a Sony shooter: People like to be fully equipped and know they got the beefy specs, even if they’ll never use them. Typically, in a system of supply and demand, looking a consumer in the eye and telling them that your brand has a lesser offering but that’s “not a big deal” doesn’t help things.
ADOBE PREMIERE ELEMENTS 15 CROP FULL
People like the DoF and low light performance of full frame. Whether it’s a feature film or not is irrelevant. u/shickey maintains a videography-themed weekly challenge subreddit, so if you're looking for something to shoot head on over to /r/DoCreativeĬamera, NLE, year started, general location



For videographers interested in weddings, events, live performances, music videos, TV, corporate, live streaming, sports, real estate, YouTube, home videos and more, welcome to /r/videography. Destined for the big screen? Try /r/filmmakers.
