Master manual control. Film with authority.
Course Description
What is This Course About?
A professional camera system is not a more expensive smartphone. It is a fundamentally different tool with different physics, technical constraints, and creative capabilities.
The techniques that work on a phone do not automatically transfer. The disciplines that make professional camera footage look professional must be learned specifically for the system.
This course makes the transition from smartphone to mirrorless and DSLR videography not just about which buttons to press, but about the technical disciplines that professional video on these systems demands.
The most important of these is the 180-degree shutter rule: the foundational video exposure principle that smartphones do not use because they handle it computationally.
Understanding it and understanding why ND filters are the tool that makes it work in bright conditions is the entry point to professional camera video that no amount of smartphone experience provides.
You will learn to operate mirrorless and DSLR cameras for video across all manual settings, select and deploy interchangeable lenses for their specific visual character and technical function, work with LOG and flat picture profiles that create editing latitude unavailable on smartphones, manage audio inputs including XLR connections and on-camera mics, use fluid-head tripods and motorised gimbals for professional stabilisation, and integrate your camera system into a complete production workflow from brief to footage handoff.
By the end of this course, you will confidently operate a professional mirrorless or DSLR system to deliver technically accurate and aesthetically aligned footage for a range of production contexts.
Target Audience
Who This Course is For
This course is for videographers and content producers who are ready to transition to professional camera systems, or who already own one but are not using it to its full potential.
- Graduates of Modules 1 and 2 who are ready for a professional camera system
- Videographers upgrading from smartphone to mirrorless or DSLR
- Marketing professionals producing branded video content who need professional camera quality
- Production assistants transitioning into camera operator roles
- Content creators producing interviews, promotional, and corporate videos
- Photographers with DSLR or mirrorless cameras who want to develop video production competency
Access to a mirrorless or DSLR camera with at least one lens is required.
Prerequisites
What You’ll Need to Get Started
- A mirrorless or DSLR camera with a manual video mode. Bring all available lenses.
- DaVinci Resolve free edition installed before Day 2 (download free from blackmagicdesign.com).
- Prior smartphone videography experience, either from the Mobile Smartphone Videography Essentials course or equivalent hands-on practice.
- A working understanding of basic video terminology: frame rate, shutter speed, aperture, and white balance.
Course Highlights
What You’ll Learn
Professional camera systems for video require specific technical disciplines that are genuinely different from smartphone videography. This course covers all of them.
- How mirrorless and DSLR systems operate for video production menu architecture, record modes, video output settings, external recording options, and the critical differences between mirrorless and DSLR systems for video work
- The features and functions of professional camera equipment and accessories for video follow-focus systems, matte boxes, EVF attachments, external monitors, battery systems, and rigging hardware
- Technical specifications for professional video codec selection (H.264 vs H.265, internal vs external recording), bit-rate and colour subsampling (4:2:0 vs 4:2:2), colour space settings, and resolution vs frame rate trade-offs on specific camera systems
- The 180-degree shutter rule: why shutter speed must equal twice the frame rate for natural motion rendering in video, what happens visually when the rule is violated, and why this constraint does not apply on smartphones
- ND filters: why variable and fixed ND filters are the essential tool for maintaining the 180-degree shutter rule in bright conditions, how to select ND strength, and how to use variable ND without colour cast
- LOG and flat picture profiles: S-Log, C-Log, V-Log, and flat profiles, what they do to the in-camera image, why they are used, how to expose correctly for LOG, and what editing workflow they require
- Safety regulations and procedures for professional camera operations, rigging safety, electrical safety for powered accessories, tripod and gimbal load limits, and operational safety in production environments
- How to inspect and prepare professional camera systems and accessories for correct fitting and production compliance
- How to compensate for environmental variables, such as changing light, focal length demands, subject distance changes, and audio environment shifts that affect professional camera footage quality
- Camera positions for professional video production: wide establishing, medium, insert, over-the-shoulder, low-angle, high-angle, Dutch tilt, and how each communicates in a production context
- Principles of picture composition for professional video visual hierarchy, tonal depth, colour relationship, and the compositional differences between still photography and moving image framing
- Cinematography techniques specific to professional camera systems, shallow depth-of-field as a narrative tool, anamorphic lens character, practical lighting integration, and focus pulling fundamentals
- How to control camera movements using fluid-head tripods, motorised gimbals, shoulder rigs, and slider systems
- How to operate professional cameras to record sequences that meet the aesthetic and technical requirements of production briefs
- Basic interview lighting setup: key and fill light positioning, light ratio control, and practical setup procedure for a single-subject interview, the most common professional video format
- How to interpret detailed shot plans and understand the production styles and technical requirements they specify
- How to coordinate with production teams to capture complex shots requiring mounting equipment, external monitors, and multi-accessory rigs

Course Objectives
What You’ll Take Away
By the end of this course, you will be able to:
- Operate mirrorless and DSLR cameras in accordance with technical specifications, exposure requirements, and safety procedures to produce structured videography sequences
- Apply picture composition principles and visual control techniques to frame and record aesthetically aligned footage under controlled lighting conditions
- Interpret detailed videography shot plans and coordinate with production teams to execute mounted and stabilised camera sequences in compliance with technical specifications
Skills You’ll Acquire
Completing this course, you will develop the professional camera operations capabilities that the industry expects from a working videographer.
Professional camera operation
Navigate and configure mirrorless and DSLR systems for video with confidence across all manual settings
Shutter discipline
Apply the 180-degree shutter rule correctly and understand why it governs video exposure
ND filter application
Select and apply ND filters to maintain the correct shutter speed across lighting conditions
LOG workflow
Shoot and expose LOG profiles correctly and understand their editing workflow
Technical specification awareness
Set codec, bit-rate, colour subsampling, and picture profile to match production requirements
Video-specific equipment inspection
Complete pre-shoot checks that cover the technical failure points specific to professional camera video production
Composition and cinematography
Apply picture composition principles and professional cinematography techniques to frame video sequences with intention
Interview lighting
Set up a basic interview lighting configuration that meets professional production standards
Professional movement control
Execute smooth, intentional camera movements using fluid-head tripods, motorised gimbals, shoulder rigs, and sliders
Shot plan interpretation
Read and translate professional videography shot plans into precise camera setups
Production coordination
Work with production teams to execute complex mounted and stabilised camera sequences
Certification Track
Level up!
Get certified. Get noticed. Get ahead.
A Certification of Completion by Equinet Academy will be awarded to candidates who have demonstrated competency in the Mirrorless & DSLR Videography Essentials Course assessment and achieved at least 75% attendance.
Course Outline
Inside The Course
This course moves from professional camera technical foundations and video-specific specification disciplines, through composition, cinematography, and production execution, to shot plan interpretation and coordinated production teamwork. Day 1 is primarily technical and foundational, while Day 2 integrates technical knowledge with visual execution and production coordination in a structured filming simulation.

Professional Camera Operation, Exposure and Technical Setup
- Instructions to operate mirrorless and DSLR cameras for video menu architecture, record modes, video output configuration, and critical differences between mirrorless and DSLR systems for video
- Features and functions of professional camera equipment and accessories include follow-focus, matte boxes, EVF attachments, external monitors, battery systems, rigging hardware, and audio accessories
- Technical specifications for professional video codec selection (H.264/H.265, internal/external), bit-rate, colour subsampling (4:2:0/4:2:2), resolution and frame rate trade-offs
- The 180-degree shutter rule: why shutter speed must equal 2× frame rate for natural motion rendering, what happens when it is violated, and why this does not apply on smartphones
- ND filters for video variable and fixed ND, selecting the correct strength, avoiding colour cast, and using ND to maintain the 180-degree rule in bright conditions
- LOG and flat picture profiles S-Log, C-Log, V-Log, and flat profiles: what they do, correct LOG exposure strategy, and the editing workflow they require
- Safety regulations for professional camera operations, rigging safety, electrical safety, tripod and gimbal load limits, and operational safety in production environments
- Inspect professional camera systems and accessories for correct fitting and compliance with a video-specific inspection checklist, including codec, card speed, audio monitoring, and ND verification
- Alter camera equipment and settings to compensate for environmental variables, light changes, focal length demands, subject distance, and audio environment shifts
Framing, Composition and Videography Execution
- Types of camera positions in professional videography: wide establishing, medium, insert, over-the-shoulder, low-angle, high-angle, and Dutch tilt; when each communicates in a production context
- Principles of picture composition for professional video visual hierarchy, tonal depth, colour relationship, and the compositional differences between still photography and moving image framing
- Cinematography techniques for professional camera systems, shallow depth-of-field as a narrative tool, anamorphic character, practical lighting integration, and focus pulling fundamentals
- Basic interview lighting setup key and fill light positioning, light ratio control, and practical setup procedure for a single-subject interview
- Control camera movements using fluid-head tripods, motorised gimbals, shoulder rigs, and slider systems to achieve stable, intentional motion
- Operate mirrorless and DSLR cameras to record sequences meeting the aesthetic and technical requirements of productions
- Provide feedback on camera angles, framing, and exposure within a small production team
Shot Interpretation and Production Coordination
- Interpret detailed videography shot plans, reading production styles, technical requirements, and execution notes for mirrorless and DSLR systems
- Production documentation for professional camera systems shot lists, camera reports, technical setup sheets, and codec/format specification records
- Speciality professional camera equipment and accessories for coordinated production, follow-focus systems, external monitors for AC work, wireless follow-focus, mattebox and lens support
- Production workflow for professional camera shoots, pre-production equipment check, on-set technical protocol, rolling procedure, and footage management
- Coordinate with production teams to capture complex mounted sequences, multi-camera setups, follow-focus operator coordination, and external monitor-supported framing verification
- Apply technical specifications consistently throughout shot execution and review footage quality against the production brief
Assessment Methods
- Case Study Written Assessment
- Individual Project Presentation
Trainers
Meet Your Educators
Trainer Bio
Gary Koay
Gary’s passion for video creation began in his teenage years and has grown into a professional career spanning over 15 years. A graduate of Vancouver Film School, he sees video as the ultimate form of artistic expression—capable of being meticulously crafted or captured with raw authenticity.
Course Fee & Funding
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Full Course Fee (without funding)
S$499.00 S$999.00
Course Schedule
Mark Your Calendar!
2 Days | 16 Hours
Day 1: Camera system orientation, codec and technical specifications, the 180-degree shutter rule, ND filters, LOG profiles, safety and inspection, and environmental variable compensation. Camera positions, composition, and cinematography introduction.
Day 2: Cinematography techniques, interview lighting, movement control, production feedback, shot plan interpretation, speciality equipment, production workflow, and coordinated simulation plus Case Study Written Assessment + Individual Project Presentation
| Learning Mode | Course Dates | Duration | Trainer |
|---|---|---|---|
| In-Person | 27, 28 Oct 2026 (Tue, Wed) | 9.00am - 6.00pm |
Click on the course dates above to register online.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
The Need-to-Know Stuff, Fast
Everything you need to know about the course. Can’t find the answer you’re looking for? Please contact our friendly team.
Any mirrorless or DSLR camera with a manual video mode. Bring all your available lenses.
Yes. This course is designed exactly for that situation. You will develop full manual video control: the 180-degree shutter rule, ISO management, aperture for depth of field in video, picture profiles, and a professional audio workflow.
DaVinci Resolve free edition. An introductory workflow covering import, rough cut, colour correction, and export is covered on Day 2. Please install it before Day 2.
Dedicated cameras offer genuine depth-of-field control in video, interchangeable lenses, proper audio connection options (XLR or hot shoe), and access to LOG or flat picture profiles for colour grading. These creative controls are not replicable on a smartphone.
Some experience with shooting video intentionally is recommended, either from a structured course or equivalent self-directed practice. If you are completely new to video, starting with the Mobile Smartphone Videography Essentials course will give you a stronger foundation before moving to dedicated camera work.
Shoot video in full manual on a mirrorless or DSLR camera, record clean audio with external microphones, apply a basic colour correction and edit in DaVinci Resolve, and deliver a polished short video from camera to export.
Equinet Academy has partnered with JustRentLah (justrentlah.com) for camera and lighting equipment rental. The process is straightforward, similar to online shopping:
STEPS:
- Create an account at justrentlah.com
- Add the items you need to your cart
- Select your rental dates
- Apply coupon code EQUINET20 at checkout for 20% off storewide (valid till 31 December 2026)
- Complete payment, then collect your equipment
For a step-by-step walkthrough, visit the rental guide at justrentlah.com/pages/how-it-works.
AGE REQUIREMENT:
You must be 18 or above to enter a rental contract. Students under 18 may rent under a parent or guardian.
COLLECTION TIP:
When collecting your equipment, take a few minutes to check everything before leaving. Match all items against the invoice to confirm nothing is missing, power each item on to verify it works, and check for any existing scratches or damage. If anything is missing or damaged, flag it immediately. When returning equipment, JustRentLah will cross-check against the invoice and may charge for anything missing or damaged that was not flagged at collection. 99% of the time everything is in order, but this quick check protects you in the rare case it is not.

