![]() With YouTube now delivering 4K content, I wanted to make a 4K A/V video from still images and discover a digital workflow which could also be suitable for HD and 4K video production. Travel promos on tropical countries were my specialty, so with all the talk of 4K today, I decided to try a little trick to bring the audio visual or 'slide show' forward to the digital age. They were an ideal and inexpensive way to get across a dramatic point to a semi-inebriated audience. Remember those? You shot a bunch of 35mm slides, then projected them to an audience on a huge screen with two or more Kodak 'Carousel' projectors, all painstakingly syncronised to a 'panoramic' stereo soundtrack via a basic form of timecode. Once upon a time back in the mid '80s, I had a business producing 'audio visuals'. ![]() The 5n can be configured to shoot 16:9 RAW and JPEG stills simultaneously, so this is my usual setup. I've recently returned from Kyoto, Japan, where I shot a promotional video on HD ProRes 422, but during the trip I took the usual bunch of 'happy snaps' on my Sony NEX 5n, an older 'stills' camera which shares the same APS-C sensor and internal processing as my NEX VG20 'video' camera. The answer? An '80s presentaton style called 'audio visuals'. RedShark Summer Replay: With 4K footage on YouTube becoming increasingly commonplace, Craig Marshall details one way of producing and uploading video in the format without the need for a 4K video camera. All you need to make 4K videos without a 4K camera
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