The owner of an unusual car, for example, an old one or a tuned one, may want to tell others about it. One video, even a short one, can be much more interesting than a selection of static photographs.
Instructions
Step 1
Start a video review of the car by showing its appearance. Walk around with the camera, pointing from all sides. At the same time, do not forget to talk about how the car differs from the serial one (if it is tuned), or in what year it was released, and which of the exterior trim elements on it were replaced with non-original ones (if it is old). Show unusual decoration elements up close. The lighting fixtures can be removed while they are running.
Step 2
Open the hood and show the engine compartment. Let the assistant in the cockpit, having first put the gear lever in neutral, start and stop the engine so that the audience can hear its sound. Be sure to shoot this portion of the video outdoors. Some of the instruments in the engine compartment can also be shown up close.
Step 3
It's time to remove the interior. Here, focus on the dashboard, but do not forget about the walls, ceiling, lamps, chairs. Show how the devices look in the light and in the dark, what is the color of their illumination. Turn on the radio and show it, but set the volume control to zero. If any melody, even a short fragment of it, gets into the soundtrack of a movie, the content blocking system on a video hosting service can automatically make the entire movie silent. And then the audience will not hear your story. Make sure that no music is played at all throughout the video review.
Step 4
The final part of the video story may include footage of a car trip. For safety reasons, do not hold the camera yourself while driving, but entrust it to an assistant. You can shoot one part of the trip with the camera facing forward and the other with the camera pointing to the side. Finally, the final scene of the entire video may include a few seconds of shooting from the rear window of the car. It is on these frames that you overlay (for example, using the VirtualDub program) the "End of the Movie" titles.