

We can add a call to action if we want someone to follow the story further or prompts to follow Twitter or Facebook accounts. We use Wistia – a gorgeous player with a ton of marketing tools built in. Vimeo is more artful but it’s still just a way to display media and hope someone sees it. It’s also the wild west when it comes to online video. YouTube is the largest search engine in the world. Hightail has quickly become something we use on every project. Instead of getting 500 emails from ten different people, we can ask for approval, comments or further direction in one place. It’s a bulletproof way for me to share what we are working on and to have everyone weigh in. This is what we use Hightail for primarily.

And a bit part of that is using digital tools that make life easier and allow me to do multiple things within one program, which EditReady does perfectly.īeing able to quickly upload files in multiple formats and share them with my own team or with clients and get feedback quickly? Sign me up. It’s a super useful tool that I have on multiple machines. I don’t spend money wildly on tools but I do try to spend smartly. I can apply different LUTs to get an idea for which direction I may want to push color in and, if the project calls for it, I can also use EditReady to export into a different format quickly. Instead, I like to do that when I am reviewing footage, so I use EditReady from Divergent Media, which allows me to check different color grades on footage without having to commit to it. While a monitor would enable me to film with a LUT applied and to check looks on location, I generally don’t use one. I’m a big fan of playing with LUTs (look up tables) in the field, which is a way of applying a color grade to footage. You can watch the progress as it goes or just move on to something else as it does it’s thing. I’d also like to add that it’s “Mike Proof.” OffLoad has an incredibly simple interface that’s fast and reliable: you select your media source, primary location and backup location to save to, then hit start-that’s it.

But now that I’m running my own studio, I enjoy having a guiding hand on the project throughout and have taken on those duties myself.įor backing up my footage, I use OffLoad, which its makers, Red Giant, refer to as “Director Proof”. When I worked as a director and cinematographer for other people, I almost never took care of this-it was usually something the editor or producer did. Once I’ve actually filmed my project the next thing I do is manage media. We asked filmmaker Mike Collins to share the post-production tools that he relies on every day to create his videos. Gone are the days of prohibitively expensive cameras, while changes in post-production technology means you can do everything with a laptop and the right software.īut with so many tools out there, it can be difficult to know which are the best for enhancing your post-production process. The world of video production has changed dramatically over the past decade.
