- cross-posted to:
- apple@lemdro.id
- cross-posted to:
- apple@lemdro.id
Here’s what Apple really means when it says “shot on iPhone”::Behind-the-scenes video of Apple’s recent “Scary Fast” event reveals how it was filmed using an iPhone 15 Pro Max — alongside professional recording equipment and studio lighting.
Umm, yea. So?
There is far more to recording good quality video footage then just the sensor and lens on the camera, just as there is far more to recording good quality audio then just using a mic with a good dynamic range. They are tools, they make things possible. But you can still get crappy results from multi-million dollar professional equipment if you don’t do all (or at least many) of the other things needed to get good make good quality recordings.
I’m more familiar with audio in a home studio setup rather then video, but if your interested in going down that rabbit hole here’s some videos to get you started:
Equipment - https://youtu.be/PWjfYvf0fsw?si=tN-e62P07KYnQc1P
Acoustics - https://youtu.be/CRizBMyFLao?si=5FUCANkXdGawE_4c
Recording - https://youtu.be/zljEd53T2HY?si=yStHDf1TEGJyj4s7
More Recording - https://youtu.be/ib4aET7ECek?si=euBA-l-Z_3ws2CNL
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://piped.video/PWjfYvf0fsw?si=tN-e62P07KYnQc1P
https://piped.video/CRizBMyFLao?si=5FUCANkXdGawE_4c
https://piped.video/zljEd53T2HY?si=yStHDf1TEGJyj4s7
https://piped.video/ib4aET7ECek?si=euBA-l-Z_3ws2CNL
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.