I could really use some advise about what equipment to buy, and maybe some insights about how I might best go about putting it to good use... Hopefully this is an appropriate forum to ask?
My goal is to make instructional videos regarding electronics and electrical engineering. Most will likely be viewed via YouTube, probably in the small embedded format. Many will feature a lot of macro shots of electronic stuff, showing how to connect wires, measure voltages, and so on. Quite a bit of material will also be screencasts and diagrams. A few might have an interview format, but in the vast majority the only person appearing will be me. Even then, I'll probably only appear briefly to introduce the topic and most footage will be tech stuff with voiceover.
A crew, or even one other person to help, is a luxury I'll probably never have. I need to be able to operate everything (with my limited knowledge of videography) and act/speak too. I suppose that means any mic on a boom is completely out of the question?!
So far, I have a cheap flip camera (actually a Kodac knock-off), a solid tripod, and a couple 90 watt CFL lights on stands with umbrellas (cheap ebay ones), and a mac with iMovie.
Clear, pleasant, easy-to-understand audio is a big concern. So far, my mac's built-in mic (voiceover recording in iMovie) and the flip cam leave a lot to be desired. I've looked at a lot of different lav mics, ranging from cheap to $600. But so far I really don't have any good feeling for if I really need a spendy one? But one thing is for sure... electronics can be a pretty damn dry topic even if you're interested, and the poor sound quality quickly turns "dry" into "painful". I'm really hoping to invest in good audio, even if it's not cheap.
My little flip cam actually shoots ok images. But it has at least 2 huge problems. #1: it's can't focus close up. It has a macro mode that focuses within about 6 inches, but otherwise it has to be a bout 4 feet away to focus, and often I need to be closer, but not 6 inch macro close. #2: the screen is on the back side, so if I sit in front of the camera (remember, I have zero crew to help), I have no idea how the picture is framed. It has an A/V output, but when I tried connecting a screen, it's only active for playback but not recording.
Another minor but annoying problem is Kodak seems to hate Apple, so I have to copy the files manually and convert with Mpeg Streamclip before iMovie can import them. Whatever camera replace it will hopefully play nice with iMovie?
Maybe I need other stuff too? I've read that a lot of consumer camcorders have noisy preamps, if they have a mic jack at all. Will I need an external sound recorder? From what I've read, I'm probably limited to a lav mic, since nobody will be there to hold a boom pole? Or are there other options?
Editing is probably by biggest concern. I can understand iMovie, though I've already hit a few limitations, like the crop doesn't let you select less than 50%. That's great for keeping a home video tying to "zoom" too much, but when I do screencasts, I can't just capture the whole screen and then show a small portion when demonstrating how to use some software feature. I borrowed a machine with Final Cut Express 4 and bought a book, and while I went through several chapters, it all was far too cumbersome for my pretty simple needs. But maybe the new Final Cut Pro X will work better? I saw some screenshots and videos and it sure looks a lot like iMovie, only $300 more.
So, this rambling question really comes down to what I should buy? I've got a budget of about $1500 max, though it'd sure be nice to spend less. On the other hand, I really do want to achieve pretty good results, especially with excellent audio, well focused close-up video where you can really see small features, and editing to keep the final product short (unlike this question) and hopefully ease to watch and understand.
Any advise about what I ought to buy or how to apply it would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
-Paul
My goal is to make instructional videos regarding electronics and electrical engineering. Most will likely be viewed via YouTube, probably in the small embedded format. Many will feature a lot of macro shots of electronic stuff, showing how to connect wires, measure voltages, and so on. Quite a bit of material will also be screencasts and diagrams. A few might have an interview format, but in the vast majority the only person appearing will be me. Even then, I'll probably only appear briefly to introduce the topic and most footage will be tech stuff with voiceover.
A crew, or even one other person to help, is a luxury I'll probably never have. I need to be able to operate everything (with my limited knowledge of videography) and act/speak too. I suppose that means any mic on a boom is completely out of the question?!
So far, I have a cheap flip camera (actually a Kodac knock-off), a solid tripod, and a couple 90 watt CFL lights on stands with umbrellas (cheap ebay ones), and a mac with iMovie.
Clear, pleasant, easy-to-understand audio is a big concern. So far, my mac's built-in mic (voiceover recording in iMovie) and the flip cam leave a lot to be desired. I've looked at a lot of different lav mics, ranging from cheap to $600. But so far I really don't have any good feeling for if I really need a spendy one? But one thing is for sure... electronics can be a pretty damn dry topic even if you're interested, and the poor sound quality quickly turns "dry" into "painful". I'm really hoping to invest in good audio, even if it's not cheap.
My little flip cam actually shoots ok images. But it has at least 2 huge problems. #1: it's can't focus close up. It has a macro mode that focuses within about 6 inches, but otherwise it has to be a bout 4 feet away to focus, and often I need to be closer, but not 6 inch macro close. #2: the screen is on the back side, so if I sit in front of the camera (remember, I have zero crew to help), I have no idea how the picture is framed. It has an A/V output, but when I tried connecting a screen, it's only active for playback but not recording.
Another minor but annoying problem is Kodak seems to hate Apple, so I have to copy the files manually and convert with Mpeg Streamclip before iMovie can import them. Whatever camera replace it will hopefully play nice with iMovie?
Maybe I need other stuff too? I've read that a lot of consumer camcorders have noisy preamps, if they have a mic jack at all. Will I need an external sound recorder? From what I've read, I'm probably limited to a lav mic, since nobody will be there to hold a boom pole? Or are there other options?
Editing is probably by biggest concern. I can understand iMovie, though I've already hit a few limitations, like the crop doesn't let you select less than 50%. That's great for keeping a home video tying to "zoom" too much, but when I do screencasts, I can't just capture the whole screen and then show a small portion when demonstrating how to use some software feature. I borrowed a machine with Final Cut Express 4 and bought a book, and while I went through several chapters, it all was far too cumbersome for my pretty simple needs. But maybe the new Final Cut Pro X will work better? I saw some screenshots and videos and it sure looks a lot like iMovie, only $300 more.

So, this rambling question really comes down to what I should buy? I've got a budget of about $1500 max, though it'd sure be nice to spend less. On the other hand, I really do want to achieve pretty good results, especially with excellent audio, well focused close-up video where you can really see small features, and editing to keep the final product short (unlike this question) and hopefully ease to watch and understand.
Any advise about what I ought to buy or how to apply it would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
-Paul