Getting Used to GoPro Shooting with Bread Baking Experience After listening to a series of lectures, we moved to the national “Alps Azumino Park” to get used to GoPro shooting operation with a scene of bread baking experience. At this point, I tried on the “Creator Edition” set. The experience involves stretching bread dough into long, thin strips, wrapping it around bamboo, and rotating it while baking it over charcoal. After filming, we returned to the hotel and were taught a series of operations to transfer the footage from the GoPro to the Quik app and edit it. wireless connection between the GoPro and the phone using Wi-Fi and Bluetooth is available, but if you are in a hurry, using the USB Type-C wired connection is by far the fastest. For iPhones, use a USB Type-C-USB Type-A cable and Apple’s genuine Lightning-USB Camera Adapter to convert and connect. Once transferred, the video will appear in the “Media” tab of Quik. Select multiple videos at random and choose “Mural” (Mural means a mural, but you can think of it as a place to store your favorite scenes), and a short film with background music will be created as a recommended video immediately. You can add a title or skip it. If necessary, you can go from “Edit” to “Studio” to change the background music or tweak the length of the scene, but this editing is optional. If you have a GoPro subscription, it will automatically upload to the cloud as well. It’s a very easygoing video editing app, but it’s nice to be able to use GoPro and Quik together for quick uploads to social networking sites. For those who want to play with their GoPro and not edit videos, I think this is a good fit. Once you get used to it, you can make a lot of work by changing the “theme” and “music” in “Edit” and adjusting scene length, speed, filters, etc. in the “Timeline”. Of course, you can also use “Frame” to change the ratio of material shot at 8:7 to other ratios. The background music is copyright-cleared and can be used commercially, as long as it is from a GoPro original. Here is a video I made with almost all of the auto editing. Finally, there is a scene shot using the “TimeWarp” function in the “Time Lapse” section. Here you can see how well the powerful HyperBoost image stabilization works. Note that the camera is walking a fairly long distance, but the blurring is suppressed. The GoPro logo at the end is automatically included, but it can be removed by editing.
GoPro can also enjoy auto time-lapse type shooting at night. After dark, we experienced a special shooting mode that can be enjoyed at night with GoPro. In addition to video and photos, the HERO11 Black allows users to switch to a “time-lapse” mode. Among them are a mode called “Light Painting,” in which moving a hand-held light automatically captures the movement and creates patterns with light trails, and a mode called “Star Trail,” which captures the trails of the starry sky over an extended period of time. If you know how this works, you can finish it by taking time-lapse photos with a digital camera and post-processing them, but the beauty of GoPro is that you can simply take the photos easily. For example, if you shoot on the Star Trail, you can capture images like this just by leaving the camera on the trail. This was done by using Volta on the ground near the hotel and leaving it there for 6 hours from midnight to early morning. The degree to which the trails are left behind can be adjusted in the settings. The light painting was done in extremely cold weather and was done on the spur of the moment, so some of the results were not very good, but once I get used to it, I am sure I will be able to take many interesting pictures. The camera automatically creates the painting almost automatically, leaving the camera alone during the shooting. Here is a short movie of these nighttime time-lapse videos made with Quik. Of course, the added movement makes it very fun to watch. It would be fun to mix them in as part of the title of a video at an event. The circle is a smiley face, but I made a mistake. In such a case, it would be better to turn off the light while moving around and turn it on again when drawing again. Let me briefly introduce the hotel where I stayed this time, “ANA Holiday Inn Resort Shinano-Omachi Kuroyon. Holiday Inn is a brand under the InterContinental Hotels Group (IHG), the same as Hotel Okura, Marriott, Hilton, and others. While Holiday Inns are often seen overseas, there are still only three in Japan, making it a rather precious hotel. If you come to Hakuba ski resort, you should take advantage of the open-air hot spring baths.
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