The document provides safety guidelines for an outdoor film shoot near a body of water. It advises filming away from the water to avoid damaging equipment, using a tripod to prevent shaky shots, being aware of other people in public spaces who could interfere with filming, ensuring the camera battery is fully charged or bringing a spare, and removing hazards from the outdoor location.
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Risk assessment
1. Risk Assessment.
Filming near water The location we are filming is near water. The
burn valley where we are filming has a beck
so we have to make sure we don’t go to close
to it or back up with the camera and end up
in it so we don’t damage the equipment.
Tripod The tripod must be on the ground at all times
to make sure some of our shots are not
wobbly and to make sure the camera doesn’t
fall off and break.
Unwanted people We are filming our opening sequence in a
public place so this may mean unnecessary
people may be there, this may be a problem
for our opening sequence to avoid this we
could as them to move out of the way
politely or wait till they have moved.
Camera battery life On the camera we are using it has a limited
battery life so we will have to make sure that
the camera is fully charged so we don’t run
out of battery while we are filming. Or maybe
take a spare battery if we run out.
Outdoor shooting
When we are shooting outside we must
make sure that we remove all hazards such
as glass and slippery surfaces. We also
need to make sure we do not damage
anything while shooting our opening
sequence