Dude,
"Thanks for the advice! I'm fairly new at video production, as I've only shot about 5 music videos, and I'm very new at special effects. This was my first video with effects. I'm guessing you're experienced in these areas."
No prob! I'm a video newbie, but fun to tinker around with motion and music. I think lighting theory, and how to put it into practice is a skill that can really make one's videos shine. Better source material to incorporate effects into. A lot can be gleaned just by browsing youtube videos about light theory. And DIY tips like using a translucent shower curtain in front of the sun, or shoot some inexpensive work lights through it indoors. Shooting work lights onto a white wall and or ceiling, and they become the light sources. Window light. Soft shadows and diffused, pretty light. How to control light to focus on certain areas and so on. A lot of fun to explore.
Forgot to say that depending on your lens, a circular polarization filter may be an option on a sunny day. One can twist the filter, and and get the sky back into the shot. Less cumbersome than a gradual filter imo.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Vvz_d6APXkGot a canon 550d in the mail. Will be fun to use photographic lenses to shoot film - the shallow depth of field possibilities with fast lenses look really nice. Here's an example I saw on vimeo:
http://www.vimeo.com/9744624"I know the tracking is a bit off on the tree scrape scene, but the shot was so shaky that even the motion stabilizer didn't fix it. That steadycam link was awesome! That is exactly what I need. I can't thank you enough for that link."
Getting a plugin for after effects might help for harder scenes, or a new take hehe. Like mocha for AE. Costs a bit of dough, but one can check out a trial before deciding.
Got too many thumbs to make a DIY steadycam, so will probably get a hague mini motion thingy with extra weights later this year. Youtube got some videos with different experiences using it. The fluid motion looks inviting.
http://www.cameragrip.co.uk/acatalog/Stabibilizers___Steadycams.html