Video fans 0
Where to Stand
On the stands? Or on the sidelines? There’s certainly an advantage to being on the sidelines — you’re close, everything’s bigger — but the downside is there will be times that you can’t see what happened because of people in
Final Play
With great home videos of his peewee football adventures, my sister now has more than enough footage to embarrass my nephew for years to come in front of every potential date who shows up at the house. But more importantly, those precious memories are preserved and the whole family enjoys reliving them over and over right now. Don’t let your camera sit in a closet, every second that passes you never comes back. Catch what you can. your way. The other option is to be in the bleachers, way up, looking down. This way you see all the action – but Junior’s not so large in the viewfinder and rowdy spectators may shake your platform. Serious videographers will consider doing both – shooting with two cameras, one with an overview, and another close up on the sidelines. If you’re shooting professionally, you’ll want to at least consider three cameras: one overview, and two cameras on the sidelines catching closeups of the action for editing together later.


