Saturday, 16 May 2026

“Should Sailing Films Be 360°? Or Is Conventional Video Better?”

 

“Should Sailing Films Be 360°? Or Is Conventional Video Better?”

The perfect sailing shot may already be in your footage — you just haven’t pointed the camera at it yet.


Introduction: The Camera Was Pointing the Wrong Way

One of the great frustrations of filming sailing is that the most interesting thing rarely happens exactly where you aimed the camera.

You set up a beautiful shot looking forward over the bow. The sails fill, the boat accelerates, the wake curls away behind you… and then the real action happens over your shoulder.

Someone slips.
A sail flaps dramatically.
Another boat crosses close astern.
The instructor gives the perfect explanation.
The crew member makes exactly the expression you needed for the film.

And your carefully positioned camera records none of it.

That is where 360° video becomes very tempting.

With a 360 camera, you are not simply filming one direction. You are capturing everything around the camera at once. In theory, you can decide later where the viewer should look. That sounds ideal for sailing, where wind, water, people, sails, ropes and boats are all moving at once.

But is it actually better?

Or is conventional video still the stronger choice when you want a polished, clear, cinematic sailing film?

The answer, slightly annoyingly, is probably: it depends what kind of film you are making.


The Sailing Filmmaker’s Problem

Sailing is not like filming a product on a table or a presenter in a studio.

Everything moves.

The boat heels.
The wind changes.
The crew duck under the boom.
The instructor points at something important.
A line catches.
Another yacht appears at exactly the wrong moment.
The sun reflects off the water.
The microphone fills with wind noise.
And just as something exciting happens, someone stands in front of the camera.

This is what makes sailing films interesting — and difficult.

When filming our sailing activities, including the Croatia Competent Crew footage and the work around the A-Rater projects, the technical question is not simply, “Which camera is best?”

The better question is:

What sort of story are we trying to tell?

Are we creating:

  • a normal documentary?
  • an instructional film?
  • a course review?
  • a travel film?
  • a 360° experience?
  • a short social media clip?
  • or all of these from the same footage?

That is where the choice between 360° and conventional video becomes important.


The Case for 360° Video

1. You Never Completely Miss the Action

The greatest advantage of 360° filming is obvious: the camera sees everything.

On a sailing boat, this is incredibly useful.

If a conventional camera is pointing at the helm, it may miss the crew handling the jib. If it is pointing at the sails, it may miss the instructor explaining what is happening. If it is pointing forward, it may miss the boat coming up behind.

A 360 camera gives you insurance.

You can mount it on the pushpit, the mast, a selfie pole, or somewhere central, and know that you are capturing much more of the situation than a normal camera would.

This is especially useful in chaotic or unpredictable moments:

  • tacking practice
  • gybing
  • man overboard drills
  • berthing practice
  • close-quarters manoeuvring
  • racing starts
  • moments when the crew are learning something for the first time

In sailing, the best moments are often not repeated. A student’s first successful manoeuvre, a near miss, a funny comment, a sudden gust, or a beautifully timed tack may happen once and never again.

A 360 camera gives you a better chance of catching it.


2. You Can Reframe Later

This is the magical part.

With 360 footage, you can decide afterwards where the “camera” is pointing.

In the edit, you can create a conventional-looking shot from the 360 recording. You can start by looking at the helm, then pan across to the sail, then cut to the wake behind the boat, all from the same original clip.

This is particularly useful when filming single-handed or with a small crew. You may not have a camera operator available. You may be too busy sailing, learning, holding a rope, or trying not to look completely useless.

With 360 video, the camera operator can effectively appear later in the editing room.

That is powerful.

For example, during a berthing exercise, one 360 camera might capture:

  • the helm’s approach
  • the instructor’s hand signals
  • the crew preparing the lines
  • the fenders along the side
  • the harbour wall getting closer
  • the reaction after the manoeuvre

A conventional camera might capture one of those.
A 360 camera might capture all of them.


3. It Is Brilliant for Chaotic Sailing Moments

Some sailing situations are simply too busy for normal filming.

A tack in a small dinghy, for example, involves the helm moving, the crew changing sides, the jib being released and pulled in, the boom crossing, the boat changing direction, and everyone pretending this was all planned.

On a yacht, even a simple manoeuvre can involve multiple people doing different jobs at once.

A 360 camera is particularly good at showing the whole system.

It can reveal how the helm, crew, sails, ropes, wind and boat all interact. For instructional content, this can be extremely valuable. Students can see not just one isolated action, but the whole sequence.

That makes 360 video useful not only for entertainment, but also for teaching.

And as someone who spends a lot of time thinking about how to explain practical skills clearly — whether in a science lab, a studio, or on a boat — that matters.


4. Viewer Immersion

A normal video shows the viewer what you choose to show them.

A 360 video allows the viewer to look around.

That can be wonderful for sailing. The viewer can stand, virtually, in the middle of the boat. They can look at the sails, the sea, the crew, the harbour, the wake, or the approaching buoy.

For travel sailing films, this has real potential.

Imagine a 360° video entering a Croatian harbour, sailing between islands, or gliding along the River Thames on a summer evening. The viewer is not just watching the trip — they are almost inside it.

For people who have never sailed before, this could be a powerful introduction.

For people thinking about taking a sailing course, it could answer questions that normal video sometimes misses:

  • How much room is there on board?
  • What does it feel like during a manoeuvre?
  • How close are other boats?
  • What is the crew actually doing?
  • How busy does the cockpit become?

In that sense, 360 video can become part film, part experience.


5. VR Possibilities

There is also the possibility of virtual reality.

At the moment, VR is still not the main way most people watch sailing videos. Most viewers are watching on phones, tablets, laptops, or televisions. But VR does offer something different.

A VR sailing film could be used for:

  • pre-course familiarisation
  • safety briefings
  • showing boat layout
  • demonstrating crew positions
  • giving nervous beginners a sense of what to expect
  • creating immersive sailing experiences for people who cannot easily get afloat

That is very interesting from an educational point of view.

It may not replace conventional films, but it could become a useful additional format.


The Problems with 360° Video

1. Lower Perceived Resolution

This is the biggest disappointment with 360 video.

The camera may say it records in 5.7K, 8K, or some other impressive number, but that resolution is spread across the entire sphere.

When you reframe a normal rectangular shot from that 360 footage, you are only using part of the image. The result often looks softer than footage from a good conventional camera.

So while 360 video sounds extremely high resolution, the final view may not look as sharp as expected.

This matters if you want:

  • crisp sail detail
  • clean close-ups
  • high-quality YouTube footage
  • cinematic images
  • strong colour and contrast
  • professional-looking documentary shots

For social media clips, 360 footage may be perfectly good. For a polished film, it may not always be enough on its own.


2. Weird Distortions

360 cameras are clever, but physics still exists.

Because they use very wide lenses, objects can become distorted, especially near the edges of the frame. People’s hands stretch strangely. Masts bend. Lines curve. Faces can become rather unkindly reshaped.

Sometimes this looks dramatic.
Sometimes it looks ridiculous.

On a sailing boat, where there are lots of straight lines — mast, boom, guard rails, rigging, horizon — distortion can be noticeable.

This does not mean 360 footage is unusable. Far from it. But it does mean that reframing needs care.

A dramatic “tiny planet” shot might be fun for a short clip.
It may not be ideal for explaining how to rig a sail.


3. Audio Is Difficult

Good video with bad audio is bad video.

This is especially true on a boat.

Wind noise is already a major problem in conventional sailing films. With 360 video, it can be even more difficult because the camera may be mounted away from the speaker, in an exposed position, or somewhere that captures every flap, splash and rattle.

The built-in microphones on 360 cameras are useful for ambient sound, but they are rarely the best solution for clear dialogue.

If the film relies on instruction, explanation, or conversation, you may still need separate audio:

  • wireless microphones
  • wind protection
  • external recorders
  • carefully placed microphones
  • synchronisation in the edit

This adds complexity.

A 360 camera may capture the view brilliantly, but if the instructor’s explanation is buried under wind noise, the educational value is reduced.


4. Editing Is Harder

360 editing is not impossible, but it is slower.

You need to import the footage, process it, decide how to reframe it, set keyframes, correct the horizon, choose viewing angles, manage distortion, and then export it in the right format.

If you are producing daily or weekly content, this matters.

A conventional clip can often be dropped straight into the timeline.
A 360 clip usually needs more work before it becomes usable.

There is also the danger of overusing the technology. Just because you can spin the view around dramatically does not mean you should.

The editor still has to ask:

What does the viewer need to see at this moment?

Technology does not remove the need for storytelling. In fact, it can make storytelling more important.


5. Larger Files and More Data Management

Sailing films already produce enormous amounts of footage.

Add several cameras, action cameras, drones, phones, 360 cameras, and audio recorders, and suddenly you are managing hundreds of gigabytes of data.

360 video files can be large. Very large.

That creates practical problems:

  • more memory cards
  • more hard drives
  • longer transfer times
  • more backup discipline
  • more storage cost
  • more editing computer strain

After filming a sailing course or a holiday, the question is not only, “Did we get the shot?”

It is also:

Where on earth did I put the shot?

A 360 camera may capture everything, but it also gives you more everything to sort through.


The Case for Conventional Video

1. Better Image Quality

Conventional cameras usually give better image quality.

A good mirrorless camera, camcorder, or action camera pointing in the right direction can produce a sharper, cleaner, more cinematic image than a reframed 360 shot.

You get better:

  • detail
  • colour
  • low-light performance
  • depth of field
  • lens choice
  • exposure control
  • image stability
  • overall polish

For a finished documentary or promotional film, this matters.

If the aim is to show sailing beautifully — the light on the water, the curve of a sail, the concentration on someone’s face — conventional video still has a strong advantage.


2. Better Storytelling Control

A conventional camera is selective.

That may sound like a limitation, but it is also the foundation of filmmaking.

When you choose where to point the camera, you are choosing what matters.

You can guide the viewer’s attention. You can use close-ups. You can show hands on a rope, then cut to the sail filling, then cut to the helm reacting, then cut to the boat moving through the water.

That is storytelling.

A 360 camera captures everything, but “everything” is not always helpful. Viewers can become distracted. They may look the wrong way. They may miss the important detail.

A conventional film says:

Look here. This is the point.

For instructional video, that clarity is extremely valuable.


3. A More Cinematic Look

There is still something special about conventional filmmaking.

A carefully framed shot of a yacht under sail, a close-up of hands tying a knot, a low angle across the deck, or a telephoto shot of another boat crossing ahead can look beautiful.

Conventional cameras allow more deliberate visual language.

You can use:

  • foreground and background
  • lens compression
  • shallow depth of field
  • controlled movement
  • carefully composed frames
  • colour grading
  • slow motion
  • cutaways

That is harder to achieve with 360 footage.

For a sailing documentary, especially one intended for YouTube or a company blog, conventional video often feels more polished and emotionally controlled.


4. Easier Audio Management

With conventional filming, you can put microphones where they need to be.

If you are interviewing an instructor, you can use a lapel microphone.
If you are filming a piece to camera, you can control the sound.
If you are recording a voiceover later, you can build the film around clear narration.

This is much easier than relying on camera audio from a 360 camera mounted in the middle of the cockpit.

For educational sailing content, audio is not an optional extra. It is central to the value of the film.

A beautiful shot of a manoeuvre is useful.
A beautiful shot with clear explanation is much more useful.


So Which Is Better?

It Depends on the Job

The real answer is not that 360 video is better or conventional video is better.

The real answer is that they do different jobs.

A 360 camera is excellent for:

  • capturing unpredictable action
  • recording the whole boat environment
  • reframing later
  • immersive experiences
  • chaotic manoeuvres
  • social media clips
  • VR experiments
  • safety and training review

Conventional video is better for:

  • polished documentaries
  • clear instruction
  • interviews
  • cinematic sequences
  • high-quality close-ups
  • controlled storytelling
  • better audio
  • final films with strong structure

The question is not, “Which camera should I use?”

The question is:

What is the audience supposed to feel, learn, or understand?


The Interesting Option: Make Both

This is where things become exciting.

Perhaps the best answer is not to choose between 360° and conventional video.

Perhaps the best answer is to make both.

For example, a sailing course film could become:

1. A Conventional Documentary

This would be the main YouTube film.

It would have a clear story:

  • arriving at the marina
  • meeting the crew
  • learning the boat
  • first manoeuvres
  • mistakes and improvements
  • sailing between locations
  • reflections at the end

This version would use the best conventional footage, interviews, voiceover, music, and carefully chosen 360 reframes where useful.

It would be watchable, structured, and accessible.

2. A 360° Experience

Alongside the main film, selected moments could be released as 360 videos:

  • a harbour departure
  • sailing between islands
  • a tack from inside the cockpit
  • a berthing practice
  • a quiet moment at anchor
  • a race or close manoeuvre

These would not need to carry the whole story. They would offer immersion.

The viewer could explore the moment rather than simply watch it.

3. Short Reframed Clips for Social Media

The same 360 footage could also become short vertical clips for X, Instagram, Facebook, YouTube Shorts, TikTok, or LinkedIn.

This is one of the underrated strengths of 360 filming.

From one camera position, you may be able to create:

  • a forward-facing shot
  • a reaction shot
  • a sail-handling shot
  • a view over the stern
  • a vertical social media clip
  • a dramatic wide shot

That makes 360 footage very flexible.


A Practical Sailing Filming Strategy

If I were planning a sailing shoot now, I would not rely on one type of camera.

I would use a mixture.

Use 360 Cameras for Coverage

Place 360 cameras where they capture the whole action:

  • cockpit
  • stern rail
  • mast position
  • coach boat
  • cabin top
  • boom or pole mount where safe

Their job is to make sure the important moment is not missed.

Use Conventional Cameras for Beauty and Clarity

Use conventional cameras for:

  • interviews
  • close-ups
  • sail details
  • hands on ropes
  • navigation work
  • instructor explanations
  • scenic shots
  • establishing shots
  • emotional reactions

Their job is to make the film look and sound good.

Use Separate Audio Whenever Possible

For anything involving speech, record better audio separately.

Wind noise can destroy a film faster than a slightly soft image.

A sailing film with imperfect pictures but clear sound is usually watchable.
A sailing film with beautiful pictures and dreadful audio is hard work.

Think About the Edit Before You Film

The best filming decisions are made before the boat leaves the pontoon.

Ask:

  • What is the story?
  • Who is the main character?
  • What must the viewer understand?
  • Which moments are likely to happen only once?
  • Where will the sound come from?
  • What shots will I need later as cutaways?
  • What can 360 capture that a normal camera might miss?

A bit of planning saves a great deal of frustration later.


Personal Reflection: The Camera Is Not the Film

As someone who enjoys both the technical side and the storytelling side of video production, I find 360 video fascinating.

It solves one problem beautifully: missing the action.

But it does not solve every problem.

It does not automatically create a story.
It does not automatically improve the sound.
It does not automatically make a film interesting.
It does not remove the need to edit carefully.

In some ways, it gives you more responsibility, not less.

With a conventional camera, you make choices while filming.
With a 360 camera, you make many of those choices later.

That can be liberating, but it can also be dangerous. It is very easy to come home with hours of footage and no clear idea what the film is actually about.

The camera captures the moment.
The edit creates the meaning.

That is true whether you are filming a sailing course in Croatia, an A-Rater on the Thames, a science experiment in the lab, or a music performance in the studio.


Conclusion: The Best Sailing Film May Need Both

So, should sailing films be 360°?

Sometimes, yes.

A 360 camera is brilliant when the action is unpredictable, the boat is busy, and you cannot afford to miss the moment. It is ideal for immersive sailing experiences, reframed social clips, and capturing the full chaos of life afloat.

But conventional video is still hard to beat when you want image quality, clear storytelling, controlled sound, and a polished documentary feel.

The best answer may be to stop treating the two formats as rivals.

Use 360 video to capture what you might otherwise miss.
Use conventional video to tell the story properly.

A sailing film does not need to be only a documentary or only a 360° experience. It can be both: a carefully edited main film, supported by immersive clips that let the viewer explore the boat, the water, and the moment for themselves.

Because in sailing, the perfect shot may already be there.

You just need the right camera — and the right edit — to find it.

Friday, 15 May 2026

Behind the Edit: Building the Competent Crew Film

 


Behind the Edit: Building the Competent Crew Film

“200GB of Sailing Footage Later… Making the Competent Crew Film”

Filming a sailing course is easy. Turning the footage into something worth watching is much harder.

That is the lesson I am currently learning while building the film from our RYA Competent Crew course in Croatia.

At the time, it all felt simple enough. Point cameras at boats. Film ropes, sails, steering, mooring, beautiful Croatian coastline, slightly confused students, calm instructors, and the occasional moment when everyone suddenly remembers which rope is meant to do what.

Then I came home.

Then I looked at the footage.

Then I realised I had created a 200GB problem.

Not a bad problem. A wonderful problem. But still a problem.

Because somewhere inside all those files is a film. Possibly several films. There is an instructional sailing video hiding in there. There is also a travel documentary, a course review, a comedy of errors, a technical filming experiment, and possibly a public warning about the dangers of wind noise.

The challenge is working out which one it wants to be.


The Joy of Too Much Footage

One of the biggest mistakes in filming is not getting enough coverage.

So naturally, I went completely the other way.

There is footage from our monohull. There is footage from Sailing Fair Isle. There are wide shots, cockpit shots, marina shots, harbour shots, scenic shots, action-camera shots, handheld camera shots, and enough sea, sky and rope footage to confuse a knot instructor.

Some shots are excellent.

Some shots are useful.

Some shots are technically present but emotionally absent.

And some shots are best described as “wind noise with occasional boat.”

The first job is not editing. It is archaeology.

You dig through files looking for the good moments: a clean manoeuvre, a useful explanation, a laugh, a mistake, a shot where the camera is actually pointing at the thing you thought it was pointing at.

The timeline does not begin with creativity. It begins with sorting.


What Worked Brilliantly

Some of the best shots came from the moments when the camera was simply allowed to observe.

Side-to berthing practice worked especially well because there was a clear story. The boat approaches. The crew prepare. The fenders are out. The ropes are ready. Someone counts down the distance. The helm adjusts speed. Everyone looks calm while secretly calculating whether the harbour wall is approaching faster than expected.

That sort of footage edits beautifully because it has tension, purpose and a result.

The scenic footage also worked well. Croatia is very helpful in this respect. If you point a camera in almost any direction, it tends to reward you with blue water, stone buildings, islands, mountains or a boat doing something photogenic.

The footage from Sailing Fair Isle adds another layer. Seeing the same experience from another boat changes the film completely. It stops being just “our course” and becomes part of a wider story about getting into yachting.

That cross-filming may turn out to be one of the most valuable parts of the whole project.


What Did Not Work Quite So Well

Wind noise.

There, I have said it.

Sailing and good audio are natural enemies. The wind does not care about your expensive camera, your carefully planned shot list, or your desire to hear what the instructor is saying.

A lovely explanation about sail trim can quickly become:

“Today we are going to look at — WOOOOOOOOSHHHHHH — and then you pull the — WHUMP — before the boat — FLAP FLAP FLAP.”

Some footage is visually useful but impossible to use as sound. That means either replacing the audio with voice-over, using subtitles, or turning the moment into part of the story.

There is also footage where the camera angle looked brilliant in theory but less brilliant in practice. Boats move. People stand in front of cameras. Ropes swing. Spray appears. The sun moves. A perfect angle at 10am can become a silhouette factory by lunchtime.

This is the reality of filming on water. Nothing stays still except the shot you forgot to record.


The Editing Problem: What Kind of Film Is This?

This is the real question.

Is the Competent Crew film:

  • an instructional film?
  • a travel documentary?
  • a review of the RYA course?
  • a behind-the-scenes production film?
  • a sailing adventure?
  • a comedy about learning something new?

The answer is probably: yes.

But a film cannot be everything at once. If it tries to be everything, it becomes a long, floating hard drive with music.

So the edit needs structure.

The best solution may be to build the main film as a story of the course, then create shorter spin-off videos from the same footage.

The main film can follow the journey:

Arrival. First impressions. Safety briefing. Learning the boat. Steering. Sail handling. Berthing. Navigation. Confidence growing. Reflections at the end.

Then separate shorter videos can cover specific topics:

What is the Competent Crew course like?
What should you film on a sailing course?
What went wrong with the audio?
Monohull versus catamaran filming.
How to prepare camera gear for sailing.

That way the 200GB mountain becomes a useful library rather than an editing swamp.


The Story Is Not Always Where You Expected

When filming, you imagine the big moments will be the most important.

The dramatic sail hoist. The perfect harbour entrance. The beautiful sunset. The instructor explaining something vital.

But in the edit, the story often lives in smaller moments.

Someone learning to steer more confidently.
A nervous approach to a mooring.
A crew member suddenly understanding what needs to happen next.
A laugh after something goes slightly wrong.
The quiet satisfaction of a manoeuvre that actually worked.

Those are the moments that make a training film human.

A sailing course is not just about ropes, sails and safety briefings. It is about confidence. At the beginning, the boat feels complicated. By the end, it feels slightly less like a floating exam paper.

That is the story I want the film to show.


The Technical Lessons

This project has already taught me several production lessons.

First, audio matters more than almost anything else. Viewers will forgive a slightly wobbly shot. They will not forgive ten minutes of wind attacking a microphone.

Second, camera placement needs testing before the important moments happen. A camera angle that seems clever may only record someone’s elbow for half a day.

Third, too much footage is better than too little — but only if it is organised properly. File naming, backups and daily sorting matter enormously.

Fourth, filming from two boats is powerful. It gives scale, context and movement. It makes the sailing look less like a private diary and more like a proper production.

Finally, the edit must serve the story, not the shot list. Some beautiful shots will have to go. Some imperfect shots will stay because they explain the day better.


Why This Film Matters

For Philip M Russell Ltd, this is more than a holiday video.

It brings together many of the things the company does: video production, education, storytelling, problem solving, sound, photography, editing, and practical learning.

It is also a useful reminder that making educational films is not just about recording information. It is about building understanding.

A good film should make the viewer feel they have been on the journey too. They should understand what the course involved, what it felt like, what was difficult, what was enjoyable, and why it might be worth doing.

And ideally, they should not have to listen to too much wind noise.


Final Thought

Somewhere inside those 200GB of footage is the film.

At the moment, it is hidden among clips of sails, ropes, water, harbours, engine noise, wind noise, beautiful Croatian scenery, and people trying to look calm while learning new things on a moving boat.

The job now is to find the story.

And that is where the real editing begins.

Thursday, 14 May 2026

Getting the Leisure/Work Life Balance Right

 


Getting the Leisure/Work Life Balance Right

When the Things You Love Start Taking Over

There’s an odd irony in modern life.

We spend years dreaming about retirement, flexible working, having time for hobbies, finally doing the things we enjoy… and then somehow manage to become just as busy as we were before. I don't even want to give up work when I can discover new things like IR and UV Photography.

The truth is that both work and hobbies can become all-consuming.

Work has obvious ways of doing this. Emails arrive at all hours. Projects expand. Clients need things “urgently.” Deadlines move. Technology means the office can now live permanently in your pocket.

But hobbies?

They can be just as demanding.

Ask any sailor preparing a boat for the season.

Or any photographer who only meant to “quickly edit a few images.”

Or anyone who has sat down at a keyboard to compose “just a short musical idea” and emerged three hours later wondering where the evening went.

The problem is not that these things are bad.

Quite the opposite.

The problem is that even enjoyable things can become exhausting when they crowd everything else out.

The Hidden Trap of Loving What You Do

This becomes particularly interesting when work and leisure overlap.

If your job involves creativity, teaching, filming, designing, writing, building things, music, or content creation, the boundary becomes blurry.

Is editing a sailing video work?

Or leisure?

Is writing a blog relaxing?

Or marketing?

Is designing a logo for a new project enjoyable creative time?

Or another task on the to-do list?

Sometimes it’s both.

That’s where balance becomes difficult.

Because when something feels enjoyable, it doesn’t always feel like work — until you realise you haven’t properly switched off for weeks.

Why Balance Actually Matters

There’s a tendency to think being busy means being productive.

Not always.

Constant activity can simply mean constant activity.

The brain needs contrast.

Rest helps creativity.

Time away improves judgement.

Exercise improves thinking.

Sleep solves problems that determination cannot.

And fun — genuine fun — matters enormously.

A balanced life helps with:

  • better focus
  • reduced stress
  • improved creativity
  • stronger relationships
  • better physical health
  • improved mood
  • avoiding burnout

Even highly motivated people need recovery time.

Professional athletes understand this perfectly.

Musicians understand it.

Sailors understand that sometimes the tide says “not today.”

Yet many of us ignore the same rule in our daily lives.

Hobbies Can Become Jobs in Disguise

This is especially true with technology.

Photography used to mean taking pictures.

Now it can mean:

  • sorting memory cards
  • backing up drives
  • editing RAW files
  • colour grading
  • uploading
  • keyword tagging
  • social media posting
  • creating thumbnails
  • writing descriptions

One hobby can suddenly resemble a small production company.

Sailing?

That’s not just sailing.

That’s:

  • maintenance
  • cleaning
  • weather planning
  • transport
  • charging batteries
  • repairing kit
  • camera mounting
  • editing footage afterwards

Music?

Not just playing.

Also:

  • software updates
  • sound design
  • mixing
  • exporting
  • mastering

You get the idea.

Sometimes our “relaxing hobby” quietly acquires admin.

The Importance of Deliberate Switching Off

One of the healthiest skills is knowing when to stop.

Not because the work is finished.

(It rarely is.)

But because you need to stop.

That might mean:

  • leaving the workshop unfinished
  • walking away from the edit
  • postponing the email reply
  • sailing for pleasure rather than filming everything
  • taking photos without intending to publish them
  • playing music with no recording button armed

Doing something purely for enjoyment can be surprisingly restorative.

Not everything needs to become content.

Balance Looks Different for Everyone

Some people recharge by being active.

Others need quiet.

Some need social time.

Others need solitude.

Some thrive on projects.

Others need empty diary space.

The trick is noticing what restores your energy rather than what merely fills time.

A full calendar is not automatically a fulfilling one.

Retirement Doesn’t Automatically Solve It

Many people imagine retirement as endless leisure.

Reality can be different.

Projects expand to fill available time.

Volunteer roles grow.

Hobbies become serious undertakings.

You can become wonderfully busy doing things you genuinely enjoy.

Which is excellent.

Until it becomes exhausting.

Balance still matters.

Perhaps even more.

Final Thought

Life should contain challenge.

But it should also contain laughter.

Some of the best moments happen when there’s no agenda.

No filming schedule.

No deadline.

No optimisation.

Just doing something because it’s enjoyable.

That balance is not laziness.

It’s maintenance.

And perhaps one of the smartest long-term investments we can make.

Am I old enough to retire - Yes 
But I really don't want to.

Work is fun and so is the Leisure.

Wednesday, 13 May 2026

Designing the Champagne A-Rater Brand

 


Designing the Champagne A-Rater Brand

Before the Boat Is Mine, the Story Has Already Begun

There is something slightly amusing about creating logos, clothing, music, intro graphics and merchandise for a boat that, at the time of writing, is still sitting out of the water waiting for restoration.

But perhaps that is exactly the point.

A sailing boat is never just fibreglass, varnish, sails, and fittings.

A boat—especially something as iconic as a Thames A-Rater—has a personality.

And Champagne certainly deserves one.

“Before Champagne even reaches the water… the story is already being built.”


More Than Just Restoring a Boat

Restoration projects often focus entirely on practical matters:

  • sanding
  • painting
  • repairs
  • fittings
  • rigging
  • budgets
  • sourcing impossible-to-find parts

And yes, there will be plenty of that.

Quite a lot of that.

Possibly rather more than I currently realise.

But the real opportunity with Champagne is bigger.

This isn’t simply a boat restoration.

It’s the beginning of a full sailing series.

A story.

A brand.

A project people can follow from day one.

From “slightly tired classic boat” to “back racing on the Thames.”

That journey deserves its own identity.


Why Build the Brand So Early?

Because storytelling starts long before launch day.

If you wait until the boat is gleaming on the water, you miss half the adventure.

People love the process.

The setbacks.

The redesigns.

The accidental disasters.

The “that looked easier on YouTube” moments.

The late-night design decisions.

The inevitable ordering of the wrong part.

Twice.

By creating the branding now, the audience becomes part of the journey.


The Name Does Half the Work

Let’s be honest.

Champagne is a brilliant name.

It instantly suggests:

  • celebration
  • elegance
  • speed
  • sparkle
  • heritage
  • luxury
  • perhaps occasional instability if handled badly

Rather like sailing.

The challenge is turning that name into a recognisable visual identity.


The Logo Challenge

A sailing logo has to work in lots of places:

  • boat graphics
  • social media icons
  • embroidered polo shirts
  • hoodies
  • mugs
  • stickers
  • YouTube thumbnails
  • video intros
  • sponsor proposals

That means it needs to be:

  • simple
  • recognisable
  • scalable
  • distinctive
  • legible at tiny sizes

Current ideas include:

The Sail Silhouette

A clean A-Rater profile with its dramatic rig.

Elegant and unmistakably Thames sailing.


The Champagne Bottle Motif

Because the name practically demands it.

Potentially playful.

Potentially dreadful if overdone.

This needs restraint.


Vintage Club Crest Style

Something inspired by traditional yacht club insignia.

Classic typography.

Heritage styling.

Gold trim.

Feels very “old money Thames sailing.”


Modern Minimalist

A cleaner modern identity.

Sharp typography.

Simple line art.

More YouTube-friendly.


Realistically?

We may end up testing all four.


Choosing the Colours

This is harder than it sounds.

The wrong colours make everything look amateur.

Initial thoughts:

Deep Navy Blue

Traditional sailing feel.

Trustworthy.

Elegant.

Timeless.


Gold

A nod to luxury and celebration.

Also works well with the Champagne theme.

But easy to overdo.

Too much gold = yacht salesman.


White

Clean, nautical, crisp.

Essential for balance.


Soft Cream / Champagne Tone

Obvious thematic link.

Can look sophisticated.

Or like outdated wallpaper.

Requires careful handling.


The likely palette:

Navy + Gold + White + Champagne accents

Classic without looking fussy.


Clothing Ideas

Because if you are filming a sailing series…

someone eventually says:

“You should do merch.”

And they are probably right.

Possibilities:

  • embroidered polos
  • sailing jackets
  • caps
  • beanies
  • hoodies
  • crew shirts
  • softshell jackets

Potential branding:

CHAMPAGNE CREW

or

PROJECT CHAMPAGNE

or perhaps:

KEEP CALM AND DON’T CAPSIZE CHAMPAGNE

(Needs refinement.)


Intro Graphics for the Video Series

This is where the film-making side becomes exciting.

The opening sequence needs atmosphere.

Imagine:

slow aerial Thames footage…

close-ups of polished wood…

rigging sounds…

gentle water movement…

old photographs fading in…

then the logo appears.

The tone needs to say:

heritage + engineering + adventure + slightly eccentric British sailing

Not:

cheap reality TV.


Music Themes

This is one of the most interesting parts.

Because original music changes everything.

With access to synthesisers, organ, and music production gear, the soundtrack can be custom-built.

Options include:

Cinematic Heritage

Strings.

Piano.

Warm pads.

A timeless feel.


Modern Documentary

Minimalist pulses.

Subtle electronic textures.

Clean and professional.


Nautical Adventure

A broader, more emotional theme.

The “we are setting sail” feeling.


Light Humorous Theme

Because some restoration moments will absolutely deserve this.

Particularly when something falls off.


The likely reality?

A main heroic theme…

plus lighter recurring motifs.

Every good series needs musical identity.


Merchandise Beyond Clothing

The obvious options:

  • mugs
  • stickers
  • posters
  • framed prints
  • notebooks

The less obvious:

  • restoration workshop aprons
  • embroidered tool rolls
  • crew dry bags
  • sailing checklists
  • Patreon supporter exclusives

A-Rater fans are a niche audience.

But niche audiences can be wonderfully enthusiastic.


Social Media Identity

The branding has to work instantly across:

  • YouTube
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • pmrsailing.uk

Different platforms need different treatments.

Tiny icons.

Wide banners.

Vertical story graphics.

Thumbnail templates.

Consistent fonts.

Consistent colours.

Consistent tone.

This is where proper branding saves huge amounts of time later.


The Bigger Idea

This isn’t just about one boat.

It’s about building a recognisable series identity that people want to follow.

Restoration.

Engineering.

Classic sailing.

River racing.

British eccentricity.

Learning.

Storytelling.

That’s what makes it interesting.

Because by launch day, the audience should already feel like they know Champagne.


Final Thoughts

Right now, Champagne may not be racing.

But the story has already started.

And perhaps that is the most exciting part.

The build.

The design.

The anticipation.

The inevitable mistakes.

And eventually…

the first proper sail.

Preferably with nothing expensive falling off.