While most of us aren’t out shooting, now is a perfect time to sit and reflect on the photographic and filmmaking mistakes we’ve made, and how we can stop making them going forward. In this video, Joris Hermans talks about 8 of the dumbest photography and filmmaking mistakes he’s made (and sometimes still makes). They’re mistakes that almost all of us have made at some point.

These aren’t the only mistakes that we make, but most of these are definitely ones I’ve done at some point or another before figuring out solutions to them. Some of them will only apply to filmmakers (like microphone issues), but others will apply equally to both filmmakers and photographers.

On the topic of number 2, one of my biggest microphone mistakes is with wireless lavs and not double regularly checking the power in the batteries. Even when I’m reasonably confident that I’m not picking up interference and my levels are good, it’s difficult to know without regularly checking if the batteries in either the transmitter or receiver have died. I’m not sure what’s going on in number 3, but when it comes to number 8… Who cares? Stop yelling at people that their lens cap is on. They know as soon as they raise their camera to their eye. This whole issue was about film rangefinder cameras where you weren’t looking through the lens to see your scene. With those, even if your lens cap was on the end of the lens, your view wasn’t obscured. So, it was easy to snap through a whole roll of film without realising that you’d shot nothing. These days, almost all digital cameras show the photographer the view through the lens. So, if there’s a lens cap on there, they’ll see the blackness and then take it off. So, stop yelling at them like an idiot. Which of these mistakes are you guilty of making regularly? What other mistakes do you often make that you need to work on fixing?