Thank you for giving me advice, Citizen Flier. Will have that on my mind when next edit comes around. I am a bit rushy in making it and have no chance to see complete outcome until render is done. After that even if there is somethng i would love to change, it needs some time. Just need practice in shooting and editing.One suggestion would be to experiment with a shorter version. The landscape doesn't have much variation, and gets repetitive -even as it is beautiful. I forwarded the link to friends who liked it, but some never even got the the horses. I try to be brutal in my own editing. If I have a music track that's too long, I'll just do an audio fade in at start or finish. Always best to leave the view wanting MORE -not LESS.
Also, thanks for not using any "canned" transitions. They almost always distract from the story. And "story" is another element that few aerials feature. A challenge to be sure, but a worthy goal.
Loved your video. In Indiana USA we call that “whore frost”. It’s when the moisture in the air clings to then freezes to all exposed surfaces. Quite lovely in morning light!
Eka...that was brilliant and I stayed for the whole ride and the closing horse scenes were fantastic.
Hahahahaha, well in my defense I did say I was from Indiana.Um, actually it's "hoarfrost"
hoarfrost | ˈhôrˌfrôst | noun a grayish-white crystalline deposit of frozen water vapor formed in clear still weather on vegetation, fences, etc.