Trey T wrote in post #10976693
decent photographer, youll find them dime-a-dozen. not videographer. I know for a fact, shooting live event like wedding, I was able to find paid gig very easily and I live in a big city. Past year, I turned down like 4 gigs and only did one(paid) and my work isn't that great. check my info for link to my videos.
Ah I get it now. Less supply and a good client demand creates many job opportunities.
Red Tie Photography wrote in post #10977227
This was great info. I think a handheld system would be great, and bulk is my enemy here.
Why the 2 mics? I saw on the thread you linked they were worried about all the weight on the hot shoe mount. Could i do with either the shotgun mic or the H4n?
I'm rethinking my setup now as well, so hear my thoughts:
With a single zoom H4n (or H1, if I'm thinking of going cheap), I can only shoot stereo with a 90degree or 120degree pickup pattern. This is very good if for example I'm going to be shooting my performance arts. However once I head to shoot events, the wide pattern will pick up any and everything in the 90 degrees (45* left and right of your h4n) which makes it difficult to pick up just the talent you want.
With a single Rode video mic, you get decent (not good - the rode video mic is pretty much the industry's "entry level") directional pickup. You basically point in the direction of what you want to pick up, and that's it. Which in the case of videos, would probably be about right unless you place your talent at the corner of the frame with a UWA. BUT if you connect this to the camera, the camera's audio recording is very, very noisy. With a 5D2 you can adjust manual audio volume, but with the 7D or 550D / T2i you cannot. You probably can google some info on this.
Used together, you have a shotgun mic connected to a H4n or H1. The latter will then be an audio recorder. This way you'll get directional pick up without the noisy hiss, and once you plug out the shotgun mic, you can pick up some stereo sounds from the H4n / H1.
However, if you don't plug the mics into your camera, you won't get syncronised tracks. You'll then have to purchase something like pluraleyes (google) or sync them manually.
Summary
H4n / H1 alone:
- Great stereo mics
- Wide pick up, good for ambient, bad for speech
- Need to sync in post
Videomic alone:
- Decent shotgun mic
- No need to sync in post
- Noisy hiss
Videomic connected to H4n / H1:
- Good set up of two mics (not sure if you can use both at the same time)
- No hissing (or less, if you may, because the H4n in pro-audio is "entry level")
- Need to sync in post
Right now, I figured that if I can just stick with borrowing a couple of friends' H4n units and video mic, or just plan get a H1 alone for stereo pick up, I can afford one of those shoulder rigs. Might be a better plan because for the next few months I won't be covering events, but I will just be doing stuff like simple music videos or shorts that will have music added separately.
Still thinking about it