S
SurlyBiff
Guest
First let me apologise if you're sick of GoPro exposure questions. I did a search and couldn't find an answer, so thought I'd post.
This is as much a GoPro question as it is a Phantom one, but the problem is affecting my aerial videos.
I keep getting huge washed out areas in the sky. Even in shots that don't have a lot of white clouds. I bought a polarizer filter, hoping this would help. But it only darkens the whole scene. The sky, relative to the ground, is still hugely overexposed. I'm not using spot metering.
So I tried using Protune. Which helped balance the scene out a bit, but added noise to the video. I'm considering an ND filter, but I'm guessing this will only further darken the ground in the shots a lot too. So any editing in post to brighten up the ground, will mean the sky goes back to being super overexposed once again.
I'm wondering if a Cokin graduated glass filter (the the type used in SLRs), cut down and fitted to the GoPro might be the only way.
Unfortunately nothing makes an aerial video look more amateurish (apart from jerky panning!) than a washed out sky.
Does anyone have any tips for overcoming sky burnout?
Any pointers hugely appreciated
SB
This is as much a GoPro question as it is a Phantom one, but the problem is affecting my aerial videos.
I keep getting huge washed out areas in the sky. Even in shots that don't have a lot of white clouds. I bought a polarizer filter, hoping this would help. But it only darkens the whole scene. The sky, relative to the ground, is still hugely overexposed. I'm not using spot metering.
So I tried using Protune. Which helped balance the scene out a bit, but added noise to the video. I'm considering an ND filter, but I'm guessing this will only further darken the ground in the shots a lot too. So any editing in post to brighten up the ground, will mean the sky goes back to being super overexposed once again.
I'm wondering if a Cokin graduated glass filter (the the type used in SLRs), cut down and fitted to the GoPro might be the only way.
Unfortunately nothing makes an aerial video look more amateurish (apart from jerky panning!) than a washed out sky.
Does anyone have any tips for overcoming sky burnout?
Any pointers hugely appreciated

SB