Vertice is an advertising agency and production studio specializing in the integral promotion of businesses and public figures. Our Emmy Award winning body of work includes television shows, television commercials, documentaries, corporate videos and music videos.
With a wide range of experience in all audio-visual mediums, Vertice offers you promotional techniques especially designed by professional in the industry. Our team includes previous employers from Univision, Telemundo, Fox and Pbs.
Vertice was founded back in 1998 in San Diego, California and quickly grew internationally to Mexico. After a few years our work started to get recognition at several awards and film festivals. We have won awards from: The National Academy of Television Arts and Science (NATAS), London Independent Film Festival, San Diego Latin Film Festival and Palm Springs Independent Festival of Shorts Films.
We provide quotes at no cost and we are budget friendly. Bring us your project, we'll make it happen.
Video production, or videography, is the art and service of videotaping, editing, and distributing a finished video product. This can include television production, commercial video production, corporate and event videos and special-interest home video. A video production can range in size from one solo camera operator (aka a "one-man band"), to a crew of two including the camera operator and a sound person, to a multiple-camera shoot requiring many personnel. Styles of shooting include on a tripod (aka "sticks")[1] for a locked-down shot; hand-held to attain a more jittery or looser shot, incorporating Dutch angle, Whip pan and whip zoom; on a jib that smoothly soars to varying heights; and with a Steadicam for smooth movement as the camera operator moves through rooms, as can be seen in Pulp Fiction and The Shining. A "Poor Man's Steadicam" is the Easyrig[2] which is worn by the shooter like a tight vest with an arm that holds the camera. Elements of Video Production Elements of video production include (1) Pre-Production, (2) Production, and (3) Post Production. All video productions are organized in this way to ensure that the process is a seamless one, and the final-result is as envisioned. Pre-production is the planning stage of your shoot, and occurs before the camera starts rolling. By creating storyboards, scouting locations, and figuring out the budget ahead of time, the goal is for your production to be free of unnecessary worry. Production is the shooting stage of your shoot, which includes cinematography, audio, lights, as well as directing, art and effects. Post production begins when your camera stops rolling. All footage is then logged and captured, organized, and then edited. But Post Production does not stop here. Effects and transitions are designed, music is added, and color compositions are made. Corporate Corporate video production covers a wide range of purposes from corporate communication, training and education, videotaping conferences and conventions, products and services, and sales. A popular type of corporate shoot is known as the "candids" or "happy-face" video, in which a multiple-day event is covered by a video crew, including speakers, break-out sessions, awards ceremonies and local recreational activities in which the conventioneers participate. An on-site editor then creates a short video presentation that is shown before the close of the convention. Many associations take advantage of the convention venue to gather interviews of their principals, setting up a green screen or other type of background in a secluded room. Video productions can be viewed live in-person, as is the case of I-Mag (image magnification) at a conference where a live video feed from a speaker is shown on one or more large projection screens; live remotely, as is the case with webcasting during which participants can view a live video stream from their computers with an internet connection; or after the event on a variety of playback mediums, including playback from the original camera tape or memory-based recording device or an edited version from a website video, optical disc, magnetic tape, or portable video device. Television Broadcast Betacam SP video production has been the broadcast television standard from the early 1980s up until the beginning of the 21st Century when many stations began to use digital media to shoot, transmit and store their footage. Two styles of producing video are ENG - Electronic news-gathering and EFP - Electronic field production. Television video productions include commercials, infomercials, newscasts, entertainment shows, documentaries, situation comedies and reality shows. Event Video production can be used at sporting, school, stage, wedding, church, and similar events to provide recordings of the events. Event video productions range in distribution from a wedding video that is custom made for a bride and groom and their immediate family and friends, to a dance recital where dozens to hundreds of videos are sold to individual dancers. Event video production can also be used to broadcast events live to viewers at home such as a press conference or concert. Video of live events can be sent by microwave or satellite from the event location to a studio in order to be broadcast