Tuesday, 3 February 2026

Time Management: Working Smarter, Not Harder


 Time Management: Working Smarter, Not Harder

We all know the feeling:
Busy all day… exhausted by the evening… and somehow the important jobs are still sitting there untouched.

The problem usually isn’t laziness.
It’s not a lack of commitment.
It’s that we’re working hard in the wrong places.

Time management isn’t about cramming more into the day. It’s about making better decisions about where your energy goes.


❌ The “Busy Trap”

Many people fall into what I call productive-looking chaos:

  • Answering emails all morning

  • Tweaking things that were already “good enough”

  • Jumping between tasks every 10 minutes

  • Doing urgent things that don’t actually matter

You feel busy — but progress is slow.


✅ Working Smarter: What Actually Helps

1️⃣ Decide what really matters today

Not everything deserves equal attention.

A simple rule:

If you only completed one thing today, what would make the biggest difference?

That’s your priority — do it first, not “when you get time”.


2️⃣ Batch similar tasks

Switching tasks burns mental energy.

Batching saves it:

  • Emails → once or twice a day

  • Filming → all in one block

  • Editing → separate session

  • Admin → grouped together

This is why production lines exist — and brains work much the same way.


3️⃣ Use systems, not willpower

Willpower runs out. Systems don’t.

Examples:

If you do something more than twice — systemise it.


4️⃣ Stop aiming for perfect

Perfection is often just procrastination in disguise.

Ask:

  • Is this good enough to work?

  • Will anyone notice the difference?

  • Does this need improving now — or ever?

Most things only need to be clear, accurate, and useful.


5️⃣ Rest is productive (seriously)

A tired brain makes poor decisions.

Short breaks, walks, and proper downtime:

  • Improve focus

  • Reduce mistakes

  • Speed things up overall

Burnout isn’t a badge of honour.


๐Ÿง  The Real Shift

Time management isn’t about squeezing more hours out of the day.
It’s about respecting your attention.

When you protect that:

  • Work feels lighter

  • Output improves

  • Stress drops

  • Progress becomes visible

That’s working smarter — not harder.

Monday, 2 February 2026

A Multispectral Way of Seeing if Bare-Rooted Trees Are Still Alive

 



A Multispectral Way of Seeing if Bare-Rooted Trees Are Still Alive

Using infrared photography to spot life before the leaves appear

Planting bare-rooted trees always feels a bit like an act of faith.
You put what looks suspiciously like a bundle of sticks into the ground, water it, mulch it… and then wait. Sometimes for weeks. Sometimes for months.

But what if you didn’t have to wait?

๐ŸŒฑ The problem with bare-root trees

In winter or early spring, bare-root trees:

  • Have no leaves

  • Show no visible growth

  • Can look identical whether alive, dormant… or dead

Traditional checks (scratching the bark, bending twigs) are crude and localised. They tell you what’s happening in one tiny spot, not across the whole plant.

That’s where multispectral imaging comes in.


๐Ÿ‘️ Seeing what the eye can’t: Near-Infrared

Healthy plants strongly reflect near-infrared (NIR) light because of the internal structure of their cells.
Dead or stressed plant tissue reflects much less.

Even without leaves, living cambium, buds, and internal moisture can still produce a detectable NIR signal.

Using:

you can compare:

  • Visible light → looks lifeless

  • Infrared → quietly glowing with activity

In false-colour IR images:

  • Living tissue often appears bright red or pink

  • Dead wood stays dark or dull


๐Ÿงช Why this works (the science bit)

Infrared reflectance depends on:

  • Cell wall structure

  • Water content

  • Internal air spaces

Even before photosynthesis ramps up in spring, living tissue still interacts with IR light very differently to dead material.

It’s the same principle used in:

You’re just doing it… in the garden.


๐ŸŒณ Practical uses

This approach can help you:

It’s non-destructive, fast, and strangely reassuring.


๐Ÿ” A quiet reminder

Just because something looks dead…
doesn’t mean nothing is happening.

Sometimes you just need the right wavelength to see it.

Sunday, 1 February 2026

Is It Time to Upgrade the Video Camera?

 


Is It Time to Upgrade the Video Camera?

Canon R5C vs Canon C50, C80… or Stay Put?

We already own what many people would call a dream hybrid camera: the Canon EOS R5 C.
It’s a serious stills camera and a very capable video camera, producing beautiful 4K and 8K footage with colour science we trust and lenses we already own.

Alongside it, though, we still rely heavily on older Canon DSLRs for multi-camera teaching, lab demonstrations, and day-to-day filming. They work. They’re reliable. But they are undeniably showing their age.

So the big question becomes:

Is it time to move up to a dedicated cinema camera like the Canon C50 or C80 – or are we better off sticking with hybrids and legacy kit?

Let’s break it down properly.


What the Canon R5C Already Does Brilliantly

The R5C sits in an interesting middle ground:

  • Superb image quality for both video and photography

  • Canon colour science that matches our existing cameras well

  • RF mount keeps us fully inside the Canon ecosystem

  • Internal fan removes most overheating worries

  • Ideal for solo operators, small crews, and hybrid shooting days

For science teaching videos, sailing content, and blog-linked visual work, it does exactly what we ask of it.

Its weaknesses aren’t about image quality – they’re about workflow:

  • No built-in ND filters

  • Audio needs more rigging

  • Still very much a camera, not a video appliance


Where Older DSLRs Are Now Holding Us Back

The older DSLRs still earn their keep, but:

  • Limited codecs and bit depth

  • Weak low-light performance compared to modern sensors

  • Manual audio workarounds everywhere

  • No timecode, no pro I/O, no modern monitoring tools

They’re fine as locked-off angles, but they’re no longer ideal as primary cameras in a modern teaching studio or production workflow.


The Case for a Cinema Camera: Canon C50


The Canon EOS C50 is often described as the “first proper step” into cinema cameras – and for good reason:

What you gain

  • Built-in ND filters (huge quality-of-life upgrade)

  • Excellent autofocus for teaching and demonstrations

  • Proper audio inputs

  • Long-form recording without drama

  • A body designed for video first

What you lose

  • No stills camera capability

  • Slightly less flexibility for grab-and-go photography

  • More setup, more intention required

For education, interviews, lab work, and talking-head clarity, the C50 starts to make a lot of sense.


Looking Further Ahead: Canon C80 and Beyond


The Canon EOS C80 (and higher-end cinema bodies) push things further still:

  • More robust codecs

  • Greater dynamic range

  • Higher-end monitoring and connectivity

  • Designed for broadcast and professional environments

But this is where an important question arises:

Are we upgrading because we need it – or because we can?

For most education, online content, and sailing video work, these cameras may be overkill unless the workflow itself demands them.


The Real Question Isn’t the Camera

This isn’t really about image quality.
It’s about workflow efficiency.

A cinema camera makes sense when:

  • You’re filming long sessions regularly

  • Audio must “just work” every time

  • ND filters save setup time on every shoot

  • Reliability matters more than flexibility

A hybrid camera still wins when:

  • You need both video and photography

  • You’re moving quickly between setups

  • You want maximum versatility in one body


A Sensible Upgrade Path

For a setup like ours:

  1. Keep the Canon R5C as the flagship hybrid

  2. Retire the oldest DSLRs first, not everything at once

  3. Introduce one cinema camera (C50 is the sweet spot)

  4. Use it as the main teaching / studio / long-form camera

  5. Let the R5C handle photography and high-impact video

That’s not chasing specs – that’s improving how we work.


Final Thought

The question isn’t “Is the Canon C50 or C80 better than the R5C?”
Of course they are – at video-specific jobs.

The real question is:

Which camera makes filming easier, more reliable, and more enjoyable for the work we actually do?

And sometimes, the smartest upgrade isn’t the most expensive one – it’s the one that removes friction from every shoot.



Saturday, 31 January 2026

Editing 360° Camera Footage as a “Normal” View

 


Editing 360° Camera Footage as a “Normal” View

Capturing shots you’d never get with a conventional camera

One of the quiet superpowers of a 360° camera isn’t the immersive headset view or the novelty of spinning the image around with your finger.

It’s what happens after you’ve finished filming.

When you edit 360° footage as a normal flat video, you’re not just trimming clips – you’re choosing the camera angle after the event. And that changes how, where, and even why you film.


๐ŸŽฅ One camera, every angle

A traditional camera forces you to make decisions up front:

  • Where do I point it?

  • What if something interesting happens just out of frame?

  • Should I pan… or zoom… or move the tripod?

With a 360° camera, the answer is simple:
point it everywhere.

Once recorded, you can reframe the footage as if you were operating a virtual camera inside the scene – panning, tilting, zooming, and even tracking movement that you didn’t anticipate at the time.

That means:

  • No missed reactions

  • No “I wish I’d pointed it slightly left”

  • No need for a second camera just in case


๐ŸŽฏ Capturing the moments you didn’t plan for

Some of the best moments are unplanned:

  • A student’s expression when an experiment finally clicks

  • A boat drifting into perfect alignment on the river

  • A subject entering the frame unexpectedly

With a standard camera, those moments are often lost forever.

With 360° footage, they’re still there – quietly waiting for you to discover them on the edit timeline.


✂️ Editing 360° footage like a normal video

Modern editing software lets you treat 360° footage as raw material rather than a final format.

You can:

  • Reframe into standard 16:9 or vertical video

  • Add smooth pans and camera moves that look deliberate

  • Create multiple clips from a single take, each with a different viewpoint

  • Output content for YouTube, TikTok, lessons, or blogs from the same recording

In practice, it’s a bit like filming with a locked-off wide shot…
…and then deciding later where the close-ups should have been.


๐Ÿง  Why this matters for education and explanation

In teaching and demonstration work, this is gold.

You can:

  • Follow hands during a practical without reshooting

  • Cut between speaker and apparatus from one camera

  • Maintain eye contact after filming by reframing correctly

  • Reduce cognitive overload by guiding the viewer’s attention in post

It turns filming from a high-pressure performance into a capture-first, decide-later process.


๐Ÿš€ Less stress, more usable footage

Ironically, filming everything often results in simpler production:

  • Fewer retakes

  • Less camera choreography

  • Smaller crew (sometimes just you)

  • More freedom to focus on teaching, sailing, or demonstrating

The camera becomes a safety net rather than a constraint.


Final thought

360° cameras aren’t just about immersive viewing.

Used this way, they’re time machines – letting you go back and choose the shot you didn’t know you needed.

And once you’ve worked like that, it’s surprisingly hard to go back.

Friday, 30 January 2026

What Makes a Duet Special?


 What Makes a Duet Special?

Musical duets can be surprisingly powerful tools when it comes to creating backing tracks for videos and a whole range of other creative uses.

Here’s how duets quietly punch above their weight.


What Makes a Duet Special?

At its heart, a duet is about conversation rather than clutter.

With only two musical lines:

  • Each part is clearly audible

  • Roles are naturally defined (melody vs support, call vs response)

  • The texture stays light, focused, and flexible

That simplicity is exactly why duets work so well in media.

Duets as Backing Tracks for Video

1. Clear Structure for Narration

For educational, documentary, or explainer videos, duet-based backing tracks are ideal:

  • One instrument carries a gentle harmonic bed

  • The second adds light melodic interest

  • Neither overwhelms spoken voice

This is perfect for:

  • Science and education videos

  • Sailing explainers

  • Tutorials and demonstrations

(Exactly the kind of content you’re producing for Philip M Russell Ltd.)


2. Built-In Dynamics

Duets naturally allow contrast:

  • One part can drop out under speech

  • The other can re-enter for emphasis

  • Simple automation feels musical, not mechanical

That makes them easier to edit than dense, multi-track arrangements.


3. Emotional Balance

A single instrument can feel exposed.
A full ensemble can feel overproduced.

A duet sits neatly in the middle:

  • Warm but uncluttered

  • Human rather than cinematic

  • Engaging without demanding attention


Other Practical Uses of Duets

๐ŸŽฌ Titles, Intros & Outros

Duets are excellent for:

  • Video intros and outros

  • Chapter breaks

  • Segment transitions

The interaction between parts creates a sense of movement and purpose, even in short cues.


๐ŸŽ“ Teaching & Demonstration

Duets are fantastic educational tools:

  • Demonstrate harmony and counter-melody

  • Show balance and listening skills

  • Easy to strip back and analyse

They also translate brilliantly into visual teaching, where students can see which line is doing what.


๐ŸŽน Adaptive & Modular Music

Because the parts are independent:

  • You can mute one line for quieter moments

  • Swap instrumentation easily

  • Re-use the same piece across multiple videos

That makes duets incredibly efficient for content creators building a reusable music library.


Beyond “Just Two People Playing”

In modern production, a duet doesn’t even require two performers:

  • One person recording layered parts

  • Virtual instruments paired with live playing

  • Organ + synth, piano + strings, melody + texture

The duet becomes a design philosophy, not just a performance format.


✅ The Bottom Line

Musical duets:

  • ✅ Make excellent backing tracks

  • ✅ Sit beautifully under narration

  • ✅ Are flexible, editable, and reusable

  • ✅ Add humanity without clutter

They’re not just fun to play—they’re practical, elegant tools for modern video and media production.