As a Senior Production Support Specialist at Frame.io, I’ve spent lots of time working with creatives to assist streamline their workflows—particularly in terms of Camera to Cloud (C2C). Recently, I had the prospect to assist The Outbound Life (Kyler and Kody McCormick) on a vibrant, nostalgia-packed music video shoot in Nashville for Ben Rector’s “Praying for Me” that includes Mat Kearney. 

Nashville felt like the proper backdrop for this mission—a metropolis the place music historical past lives on each nook, from the legendary studios of Music Row to the honky-tonks of Broadway. It’s solely becoming {that a} tune celebrating friendship and life’s journey could be filmed in Music City, the place numerous artists have come to chase their goals and inform their tales.

This shoot excited me as a result of it marked my first time supporting a manufacturing utilizing Canon’s new native Camera to Cloud integration with the EOS C400 and C80. The mission’s tight manufacturing and publish schedule was achievable as a result of C2C allow them to work with a distant publish workforce in real-time, which stored them collaborative and creatively current.

The imaginative and prescient behind the shoot 

The workforce constructed the idea for “Praying for Me” round a stylized highway journey between pals was shot totally on a white cyc stage at Studio 615 in Nashville. To create the phantasm of motion, the workforce used immersive projector backdrops like mountains, cities, and seashores, paired with sensible props, set items, and a Chevy S10 parked middle stage. The McCormick brothers deliberately broke the fourth wall with huge pictures that uncovered the stagecraft, embracing the appeal of in-camera visuals and bodily props over digital polish.

The tune has a private connection for Mat Kearney. “When I moved to Nashville, I put the Chevy in the lyric there because that’s the truck we moved in.” 

You can see their inventive course of in motion on this improbable behind-the-scenes video they captured through the shoot.

Camera builds

  • A Cam: Canon C400 (studio construct)
  • B Cam: Canon C80 (studio/handheld construct)
  • C Cam: Canon C80 (gimbal construct)

Lenses 

Network and add technique

One of the largest keys to success when utilizing C2C is having quick and dependable web connectivity. This isn’t nearly obtain speeds. Upload speeds are essential for getting pictures uploaded in a well timed method. As the McCormick brothers famous of their planning, connectivity was really “a deciding factor” on which location they selected for the shoot.

The location had glorious Wi-Fi protection with a number of ceiling-mounted entry factors. There have been additionally Ethernet drops out there, and I introduced a Sclera cellular modem as backup. Having these redundancies is all the time good whenever you’re betting the workflow on connectivity.

When working with Camera to Cloud, constant Wi-Fi protection can really be extra essential than uncooked pace—particularly when importing light-weight proxies. A digital camera transferring round set with an intermittent sign will battle to keep up uploads, even on a quick community. But with stable, constant protection all through the taking pictures space, even a extra modest connection can reliably deal with 9 Mbps proxy uploads with out interruption.

The workforce examined all out there bitrates from 6 Mbps as much as 35 Mbps. They landed on 9 Mbps as their candy spot for balancing picture high quality with add pace, as demonstrated of their technical walkthrough video. Each digital camera recorded these proxy recordsdata (light-weight variations of the complete decision footage) to the second SD card slot whereas persevering with to seize full decision to the hero media.

A workflow years within the making

Like many administrators, Kody and Kyler have skilled the challenges of disorganized units. As Kody defined, “Like many directors, we’ve been on our fair share of sets where we wish it were more organized. We implement tricks here or there, but I feel like utilizing Camera to Cloud functionality was a major leap forward. This is the workflow we’ve been looking for for years, but didn’t think was possible.”

The peace of thoughts issue was transformative. “First, it felt really good knowing we had a remote editor combing through our proxies as we were shooting them. Sure, small tweaks were found, but the value of knowing the footage was canned and shot right really brought peace of mind,” Kody famous.

This is the workflow we’ve been searching for for years, however didn’t assume was potential.”

Remote editorial collaboration with Frame.io

On set behind the scenes photo from Outbound Life
Image © Dawson Turner

Barrett Kaufman, the assistant editor working remotely from Chicago, was built-in into the method from the very first take. The BTS video reveals him making a Collection known as “Need Review” and offering real-time suggestions on particular technical parts like shadow element whereas the crew was nonetheless on set. Collections are Frame.io’s smart organizational tool that robotically teams property based mostly on metadata, rankings, or customized standards you outline. Unlike conventional folders, collections replace in actual time as new content material matching your standards will get uploaded to the mission.

This form of on the spot technical suggestions was invaluable. Barrett might begin organizing selects, create Collections, and even share preliminary coloration grades through the shoot. This gave the administrators confidence they have been capturing what they wanted—and gave publish a useful head begin.

Transforming director-talent collaboration

What actually excited me was listening to how C2C modified the McCormick brothers’ method to working with expertise. The real-time evaluation capabilities have been sport altering.

As Kody McCormick defined, “I underestimated how much it would enhance our ability to collaborate with the artists. When Ben or Mat asked about a shot or a take, instead of trying to explain it, I’d get my iPhone out and show them exactly how something played on screen. It brought many light bulb moments instantaneously. It eliminated guesswork. It allowed us to approach each take with greater precision, and everyone was able to stay on the same page every step of the way.”

Kyler McCormick was stunned by the collaborative impression:

“Typically, there’s a degree of separation between what is captured and what is understood. Talent will give take after take, but there’s usually a level of mystery about how things are panning out. This eliminated that mystery. We were able to direct and communicate with a higher level of precision in real time. They say ‘show, don’t tell.’ That absolutely applies to directing, as well. We could immediately show talent how a shot was framed, and they might ask to be framed slightly tighter, or to move the camera to capture their ‘good side.’ When directing, our first priority is to make talent feel a sense of ease, allowing them to put forth their best work. I’ve honestly never come across another tool that allowed us to do that so easily.“

We were able to direct and communicate with a higher level of precision in real-time…I’ve honestly never come across another tool that allowed us to do that so easily.“

Technical setup

For readers interested in replicating this workflow, the McCormick brothers created an excellent technical walkthrough video.