Creating a home video studio is something that everyone thinks about once they start to shoot a lot of video – whether for business, personal or professional use.  There are expensive kits you can purchase online to convert an area of your home into a studio but, being ever-frugal, I wanted to find a cheaper way to do it.  This post covers both the equipment you’ll need for the actual studio plus the software and gadgets you’ll want / need for shooting the videos.

STEP #1 — SHOPPING FOR EQUIPMENT

You’ll need to do a teeny bit of shopping first so to make it really easy, I’ve created a shopping list for you!

Studio Equipment

Studio Gear / Gadgets

Studio Software

Once you have your shopping done, it’s time to setup the actual studio.

STEP #2 — SETTING UP THE STUDIO

Find a location in your home that has space available for the green screen and plenty of space to setup lighting and the tripod for your camera.  Remember, you are going to want enough room to position the tripod far enough back to get the green screen fully in the shot.  In my home, my basement has not a whole lot in it so I choose an area of the basement for my studio.

The first thing I did was hang the green screen.  Since the Lusy bedspread has holes across the top, I was able to easily hang nails at the first and last holes and add one in the middle.  Then, I took packing tape and taped the sides down, working from the top and pulling gently as I went.  Since the sides have holes and will not be caught on camera, adding the tape in that location didn’t matter either.  It won’t be in the shot.

Once I had the green screen up and taped, the next step was to iron the green screen.  It’s best, in my opinion, to iron it right on the wall so long as you take care and don’t hold the iron in one spot for too long.  Since the walls in my basement are concrete, that doesn’t matter so much for me but please do be careful if your walls are any other substance.

After the green screen is prepped, you want to setup and structure your lighting in the room.  I have one set of 500W halogen lights that will be used to primarily light up the green screen.  If you aren’t doing full body green screen work, you could also get a floor light to put on the floor directly below the green screen.  However, halogen lighting gets VERY hot so keep it at a safe distance from all fabrics.  For floor flooding lights, you might want to consider non-halogen.

Make sure the area is really well lit and that your green screen has no flaws or wrinkles.  If it does, that will cause the green screen removal in the editing side to be faulty.

Lastly, setup your video tripod and equip your camera.  Set it up at a distance away from the green screen so you don’t have the Lusy bedspread holes showing and then mark it on the floor (helpful if you want to easily position it your next go around).

STEP #3 — TESTING IT OUT

Once you have all of the above done, film a short segment to test it out.  Bring the footage to your computer, download it and add it into your video editing software.  Try removing the green screen inside of the software and adding another background.  Watch the movement to see if any parts of the green screen need to be fixed.  If it’s not quite doing the trick, you may need brighter lighting or another ironing job on the green screen.

Any other tips to add to this post?  Leave them as a comment!

  • That's the great article! I just pass 'n read it, two thumbs up! ;)
  • Awesome stuff! Erin I was wondering what type of headset you use for filming video from your computer... I remember seeing you with a simple "wire" type, which do you recommend?

    Thanks so much!
  • Hi Nathalie!

    I actually don't use a headset! The only time I'll use something is when recording on WeToku and I use just the iPhone headphones. I'll just plug one in. Otherwise, I use a Blue Snowball microphone (kept out of sight) and just my speakers for sound. :)

    Erin
  • annbell
    Thanks, Erin, for the amazingly detailed information.
    One question: Both software programs appear to be mac.
    I have a pc. What software should I use.
  • Great question! If you're on a PC, you can try Windows Movie Maker. While not a perfect solution, it will let you do *some* of the things that the Mac related apps will. Hope this helps!!
  • peterchilds
    You can also use colour corrected 5500K (daylight) compact florescents.

    They are cooler than halogen, draw way less power, and last forever.

    I use 2x47W for shooting food prep.


  • Peter -- thanks SO much for posting regarding the lights!! Halogen lights are a bit more dangerous given their heat so these alternative bulbs are perfect.
  • Very cool! I wish I could do this in my place, I don't have anywhere that I could keep the green screen (and even doing a temp set up would involve moving all the furniture out of the room). I'll have to get a bigger office in my next place!
  • It is quite convenient to have the space but the great part is that you can do it in a small space too! Just hang it horizontally on the wall and just shoot from the waist up. If you tack not-so-visible pins or nails in your wall, you could take the green screen down when you weren't shooting the videos. :)
  • Did you take a sample video? I'd love to see the quality. I do all my video recording in the basement too, and nobody has noticed :)
  • Not yet but soon!
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