On the South Bank of the River Thames in central London, the DSLR & Mirrorless Video course at Royal Festival Hall teaches camera owners how to turn stills tools into cinematic storytellers. Set in Royal Festival Hall, London SE1 8XX, UK, this one-day workshop combines classroom sessions and short outdoor exercises along the South Bank to help beginners shoot, focus, and edit compelling video. The day runs about six hours and covers camera setup, manual exposure, aperture, shutter speed, ISO, white balance, pull focus, audio capture, framing, and basic workflows for transferring and encoding footage. Instructors break down menu navigation and camera buttons, then move participants outside to practice depth of field and handling techniques against London landmarks: the curving sweep of the Thames, the modern lines of the Southbank Centre, and sightlines toward Waterloo Bridge and the London Eye. Classroom time covers codecs, color profiles, memory card choices, and practical editing advice for platforms such as YouTube and Vimeo. The course is aimed at complete beginners who own a digital camera; no prior video experience is required. Practical notes include the classroom location on the first floor with no lift—contact the office if you need assistance—and a request that attendees look after their own equipment. If only one person books the operator offers a one-to-one option or rescheduling. Beyond technical skill, the course teaches how to see motion in a cityscape: how reflections on the Thames, the textured concrete of the Southbank walkways, and passing commuter traffic can become visual elements. The Royal Festival Hall itself is a cultural landmark opened in 1951 as part of the Festival of Britain; its postwar modernist auditorium provides an apt backdrop for a class that mixes historical civic space with contemporary digital craft. If you’re visiting London and want practical, hands-on instruction that leads to better video from the gear you already own, this course is an efficient way to level up. Expect a small-group classroom pace, practiced exercises along the river, clear takeaways about exposure and audio, and tips on post-production. Bring your camera, charged batteries, and curiosity—this is less about glamour and more about making clearer, stronger moving images in one of London’s most dynamic urban corridors. Practicalities: the course runs approximately six hours, welcomes participants aged 16 and up, and asks attendees to arrive five to ten minutes early and ring the PCL door bell to be let in. The instructor-led format balances theory and creative exercises so you leave with usable footage and a clear plan for editing. Whether you want to make travel clips, short documentaries, or better social video, this course reduces technical friction and helps you focus on storytelling in a city around the river.