It's a 360 camera mounted to my head, and normally I would frame it in post processing so that you can see my bars, but unfortunately there was a mud splatter on the lense that was very distracting so I framed it higher than usual because I really liked the colours and the way it flowed. It's a great section of trail, and after coming out of a rowdy snow storm minutes before, into that little bit of awesome was pretty special.
Yeah, it was a pretty amazing spot, at just the right time. Pouring rain on the drive out, sun cracking out at the start and riding through snow covered trees with a brown dirt ribbon to ride on. Then a blizzard, and finally what you see there.
Chest mount is good for landscape videos like this, but not as good for vertical as it's hard to show the bars without showing your chin at the same time unless you zoom in so much that the quality suffers. As much as I can't stand vertical videos on principal, Instagram's insistence on portrait mode means that reels need to be rendered vertically to fill the screen. I've never been an Insta user, and never had a camera prior to a couple of months ago other than my phone, but with starting a new brand it's pretty much mandatory to have a presence on social media. And since I am just starting out, I'm the sole content creator. Luckily I like bikes a whole lot, and also luckily I live in a place that shoots well (although this was shot about a 9 hour drive away - still close enough but not my local), so it's not much of a stretch to put some things together.
I'm looking forward to GoPro updating the 360 to higher resolution. It's a great camera, for the very reason you can shoot first, then render in either format later without fussing with the camera angle or missing the shot because it's pointed a little too high or low, but it does suffer a bit when you want to zoom it in later, or if you want to shoot with higher frame rates.