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Hi,
You could upgrade the Canon body, as you have some lenses - then see what videos you are making - and buy a lens to suit.
Blackmagic are fine cameras, but need a lens and quite some fiddling to get them up and running... and look at the weight, even without the lens battery. In practice most BM users will use focus rails and a frame/chassis.... making it rather better for studio shots with a Pro tripod ( since you'll need to rebalance the weight when changing lens.).... oh yes you'll need a small SSD to store the pics.
If you join a local Movie-making Club there will be plenty of advice and gear to try....
Software for Editing is a tricky subject as most folks stick with what they know.. Adobe is mighty good, but the subscriptions are massive ( unless you are a Pro and can justify ). Magix have several suites, some competing with their own... and there are a couple of Free ones which are cut-down version eally for PROs,. Colour grading being very much in vogue.
I don't understand yr complaint about DoF - Cameras/camcorders with WA lens and small sensors usually have "sharpening" built-in - so nearly everything is in focus.... what semi-pros want is a shallow DoF so only the subject is sharp . . . and that's much more difficult, unless you can dial-in ND filter so the Iris opens up. Of course Pro camcorders have this built-in.
BTW a camcorder is the easiest piece of kit to use; being developed to cater for movie-making.
You should give us some idea of what you are intending to film with the new kit, etc. Also, what's wrong with the Canon camera you have?
Cheers. |
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