How to Create a Good Video
Find a good camera., Pick a good location., Get a good angle., Speak clearly., Be alive!, Transfer for editing., Edit on YouTube., Make short clips., Use simple transitions., Add effects and filters., Publish your video!
Step-by-Step Guide
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Step 1: Find a good camera.
An 8 megapixel phone camera or better will get the job done well. -
Step 2: Pick a good location.
Find a place find a place with good lighting.
Somewhere outside, a room with lots of windows, or a room with good lights.
Avoid dark rooms or rooms with a single light source. , You should probably place the camera at or above shoulder height.
If you are filming a stationary video, a good shot typically has the character's shoulders near the middle and their waist or knees at the bottom.
ALWAYS do a short test video before recording the content.
If you want to get fancy add multiple cameras each recording from different sides. , If you’re speaking about a subject know what your talking about.
If its an actual speech create a script with bullet points.
Practice recording to get the hang of being loud and not stuttering.
Unless you’re a gifted speaker you’re going to mess up. , Act like you’re talking to someone.
Don’t read of your script, just hit the main points.
Don't stare at the camera, or any individual object.
Even if you stay facing the camera, shift your weight, use limited hand gestures, speak with more than monotone, and use your face to reinforce your words.
If possible add jokes, even if they are corny. , If it is on a phone, upload it to YouTube.
You will need a Google or Gmail account to upload, but it is easy (and free) to sign up.
You can make the videos private or public if you want to keep it to yourself or share.
If your phone/camera isn't able to, then copy it to your computer and edit it. , This works best on Google Chrome (browser).
Google search “youtube editor”, login, and then you can choose any videos you’ve uploaded.
You can learn how to edit from this feature at How to Use YouTube's Video Editor , Unless there is unbroken dialogue, or a scene that must be all one piece, chop it up.
Change your shot every 1-10 seconds.
This may sound extreme but is very important.
Use this to cut out any errors or content-lacking spots in your video. , Do not use flipping, rotating, spinning, shattering, melting, zooming, or otherwise obnoxious animations.
While they may look cool they will not make your video look cool.
The best transitions to use are fading to black (on YouTube choose color fade
-> black) or no transitions (also called a hard transition).
Also other ones that can be used are; fading to white, cross blur, cross fade, and wipe. , Judge if your video needs to be brighter or dimmer, rotated, stabilized, or have muted audio for certain clips.
If so these options can all be done on the YouTube editor. , You can choose if everyone can see it, or if only people with a link can see it, or if only you can see it.
If you want a copy of your video, choose the “unlisted” option and then use one of the many YouTube downloaders to get in on your computer. -
Step 3: Get a good angle.
-
Step 4: Speak clearly.
-
Step 5: Be alive!
-
Step 6: Transfer for editing.
-
Step 7: Edit on YouTube.
-
Step 8: Make short clips.
-
Step 9: Use simple transitions.
-
Step 10: Add effects and filters.
-
Step 11: Publish your video!
Detailed Guide
An 8 megapixel phone camera or better will get the job done well.
Find a place find a place with good lighting.
Somewhere outside, a room with lots of windows, or a room with good lights.
Avoid dark rooms or rooms with a single light source. , You should probably place the camera at or above shoulder height.
If you are filming a stationary video, a good shot typically has the character's shoulders near the middle and their waist or knees at the bottom.
ALWAYS do a short test video before recording the content.
If you want to get fancy add multiple cameras each recording from different sides. , If you’re speaking about a subject know what your talking about.
If its an actual speech create a script with bullet points.
Practice recording to get the hang of being loud and not stuttering.
Unless you’re a gifted speaker you’re going to mess up. , Act like you’re talking to someone.
Don’t read of your script, just hit the main points.
Don't stare at the camera, or any individual object.
Even if you stay facing the camera, shift your weight, use limited hand gestures, speak with more than monotone, and use your face to reinforce your words.
If possible add jokes, even if they are corny. , If it is on a phone, upload it to YouTube.
You will need a Google or Gmail account to upload, but it is easy (and free) to sign up.
You can make the videos private or public if you want to keep it to yourself or share.
If your phone/camera isn't able to, then copy it to your computer and edit it. , This works best on Google Chrome (browser).
Google search “youtube editor”, login, and then you can choose any videos you’ve uploaded.
You can learn how to edit from this feature at How to Use YouTube's Video Editor , Unless there is unbroken dialogue, or a scene that must be all one piece, chop it up.
Change your shot every 1-10 seconds.
This may sound extreme but is very important.
Use this to cut out any errors or content-lacking spots in your video. , Do not use flipping, rotating, spinning, shattering, melting, zooming, or otherwise obnoxious animations.
While they may look cool they will not make your video look cool.
The best transitions to use are fading to black (on YouTube choose color fade
-> black) or no transitions (also called a hard transition).
Also other ones that can be used are; fading to white, cross blur, cross fade, and wipe. , Judge if your video needs to be brighter or dimmer, rotated, stabilized, or have muted audio for certain clips.
If so these options can all be done on the YouTube editor. , You can choose if everyone can see it, or if only people with a link can see it, or if only you can see it.
If you want a copy of your video, choose the “unlisted” option and then use one of the many YouTube downloaders to get in on your computer.
About the Author
Sara Wells
Writer and educator with a focus on practical pet care knowledge.
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