VIDEO PRODUCTION TECHNIQUES
- Learn from professionals who spent years refining their approach to camera work, lighting, and editing
- Access structured lessons that take you from initial concept to final export
- Apply techniques to real projects with feedback that helps you grow
Transnational learning without borders
Horlavend connects students from different countries to the same quality education. Your location does not determine what you can learn or who can teach you. We open pathways to skill development regardless of where you were born or where you currently live.
How video production works in practice
Creating compelling video content requires understanding how cameras capture light, how editing software processes footage, and how audio synchronizes with visual elements. The technical foundation matters because small choices in exposure, frame rate, or codec selection directly affect what viewers see and hear.
Video production is not only creativity. It involves problem-solving when lighting conditions change, when audio has unwanted noise, or when footage needs color correction. Each project teaches you how different tools respond to different situations and which techniques deliver consistent results.
The curriculum covers pre-production planning, camera operation, sound recording, editing workflows, and file delivery. You will work through scenarios that mirror what professionals encounter on shoots and in post-production suites.
What the program includes
Each section builds specific competencies that combine into a complete production skill set.
Camera fundamentals and composition
Understand how sensor size, aperture, and shutter speed interact. Learn framing rules that guide viewer attention and how to break those rules when the shot demands it.
View curriculumLighting setups for different environments
Study three-point lighting, natural light modification, and how to control harsh shadows or unwanted reflections. Practice setups that work in small spaces and outdoor locations.
Explore techniquesEditing workflows and color grading
Build efficient timelines in professional editing software. Apply color correction to match footage from different cameras and create consistent visual tone across scenes. Learn when to use cuts, transitions, and effects to serve the story rather than distract from it.
See workflow details
Audio recording and post-production
Capture clean dialogue with lapel and boom microphones. Remove background noise, balance levels, and mix audio that complements rather than competes with visuals.
Audio techniquesPractical assessments
Tests and quizzes verify that you understand key concepts before moving forward. Each assessment focuses on specific technical knowledge and decision-making scenarios.
Try sample quizLearning outcomes tracked over time
Pre-production planning
Shot lists, storyboards, and equipment checklists prevent problems before cameras roll. Planning determines whether you have the right gear, enough time, and clear direction when you start shooting.

File management and delivery
Organize footage by date, scene, and take. Choose codecs and formats that match client requirements or platform specifications. Prevent data loss through backup systems and folder structures.
Test your current knowledge
This quick assessment helps identify which areas you already understand and which need more attention.
Student experiences
I had been shooting videos on my phone for a while but never understood why some looked professional and others did not. The section on lighting made the difference clear. Now I can see when a setup will work before I even press record.
The editing module forced me to organize my footage properly. I used to waste hours searching for clips. Following the file management system saved me more time than any shortcut or plugin ever did.
I appreciated that the assignments required submitting actual work, not just watching videos. Getting specific feedback on where my audio had clipping or where my color grade shifted too far helped me recognize those issues in future projects without needing someone to point them out.

The quiz section helped me identify gaps I did not know I had. I thought I understood aperture until the questions revealed I was confusing it with ISO in certain scenarios. That pushed me to review and actually learn the difference.
Being able to access the platform from another country made this possible for me. I had tried local courses but they were either too expensive or focused on outdated equipment. Horlavend gave me current techniques without requiring me to relocate.