Posts Tagged ‘Editing’

Workshop Preps and the December Issue

by VideoChick | October 7th, 2009

lightsinstudio-resizedHard to believe, but we just shipped the December issue off to the printers. This has been a busy week at Videomaker Headquarters, we’re also getting ready for another terrific workshop this weekend.

We’ve been getting all the gear together for the two upcoming workshops: Basic Production and Intensive Lighting. It’s going to be another full house at VMHQ!

We have a nice collection of HD cameras and Lights, tripods and other accessories to teach with, and have been teaching the Basic Production Class for several years. It’s usually a great success. Having the chance to meet and greet other video enthusiasts and spend the weekend working on a video project is great fun. lights-n-studio2-resized Read the rest of this entry »

FTC Goes After Paid Bloggers & Celebs

by VideoChick | October 5th, 2009

dollar-sign-resizeftc-logoThe FTC, (Federal Trade Commission), announced this week that it is beefing up the rules regarding paid endorsements by bloggers and Tweeters saying they love/use a product but in reality are shills for the company. This new regulation by the FTC is the first real change they’ve had in the rules since the early 1980s. From celebrities endorsing products on shows like “Oprah” to unknown so-called “users” who rave about the products on their blog, Twitter or Facebook pages, the Truth in Advertising guidelines didn’t touch social media until now. Read the rest of this entry »

Viral “I Gotta Feeling” Black Eyed Peas video and Ken Burns series are hot!

by VideoChick | September 28th, 2009
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Here’s a well-choreographed fun video you gotta see. A one-take music video to the tune “I Gotta Feeling” by the Black Eyed Peas. The camera begins outside a building on the University Montreal Quebec’s campus, and then travels through out the building, hovering down hallways, peeking into classrooms, gliding up stairs and down, finally finishing in the TV/film department’s studio… with more than 170 students performing and lip-syncing… all in just one take. Read the rest of this entry »

Adobe Premiere Elements 8 Video Editing Software and Photoshop Elements 8 Released

by VideoChick | September 22nd, 2009

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Adobe announces its latest additions to the Adobe Elements and Photoshop family today with it release of its consumer video editing program - Premiere Elements 8 and Photoshop 8. Adobe created Elements with the intent of reaching the consumer and hobbyist market with it’s low priced video editing software, but has moved the editing program along into a robust application that can keep pace with the big boys.

Rather than throwing in more effects you don’t need, this latest update has a lot more under the hood and has added some better tools to organize your video and photos.

What’s new? There’s an auto analyzer that you can use to tag your images for fast and easy searches. You can also sync your video and photos across several computers and the program has face recognition, helping to zone in on just the images you want from, say, “Carsen’s Birthday,” and it will learn who your subjects are and can find all images of them across the files.
Here’s some advance copy from our First Look review, to be uploaded Wednesday morning:
Premiere Elements 8 adds additional automated tools: Smart Trim removes the least interesting, lowest quality footage; SmartFix corrects shaky footage and color and lighting problems; and SmartMix balances music and sound effects without overpowering dialog or background audio. Plus, the new Motion Tracking feature finds moving subjects in your footage so that you can add graphics, text, and even video effects that automatically move with them.

Read the rest of our advance review of Adobe Elements 8.0 online here  http://www.videomaker.com/article/14751/

More From Adobe’s Press Release:
Adobe Photoshop Elements 8 & Adobe Premiere Elements 8 software gives you power and ease of use so you can create extraordinary photos and incredible movies, easily manage and protect your photos and video clips with automatic online backup, and access them anywhere you are. And now, Adobe Photoshop Elements 8 & Adobe Premiere Elements 8 Plus includes everything in the award-winning software and more:
• 20GB of online storage—enough for up to 15,000 photos or four hours of DVD-quality video
• Ongoing delivery of new, easy-to-use tutorials
• Ongoing delivery of fresh seasonal artwork, inspiring templates, movie themes, video effects, and all-new Online Albums

It’s all accessible with your Adobe ID. For more details, visit www.adobe.com/go/membership_elements. Adobe Photoshop Elements 8 & Adobe Premiere Elements 8 Plus, $179.99 (Available on Adobe.com, U.S. only) A savings of $20 off the first year of Plus, if purchased with the software bundle.
Already have Photoshop Elements 8 & Adobe Premiere Elements 8? Upgrade to Plus via the product for $49.99 a year.

Free Free Free. Public Domain Footage

by VideoChick | July 15th, 2009

filmstrips_blogCheck out this blog we discovered on WebTV Wire. It’s a fabulous collection of different sites where you can find free public domain footage.

The blog,  “Free Online Stock Video Footage - 9 of the Best Domain Video Resources” was compiled by Michael Pick a few years ago, and is a good resource for anyone who needs to grab some old military footage, cartoons or commercials as well as NASA space pix and other footage that is open to Creative Commons non-commercial use. Read the rest of this entry »

ASCAP wants YouTube users to pay

by VideoChick | July 10th, 2009

ascapThe American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers; better known as ASCAP, is targeting videos on YouTube for royalty payment for it’s professional creative members. This is a good thing for producers who work hard at making their product, only to see that someone has “borrowed” some of that property clips for their own use. But the average consumer who just wants to make a simple video using a well-know song as their music bed might get confused.

According to this recent report from Digital Media Wire, if you make a cute little video using copyrighted music, and place it on your own personal blog or non-commercial website, you won’t be targeted, but if you post it for the masses, you will. Or something like that. As copyright laws for intellectual property goes, it’s always muddy, and only attorneys seem to be able to interpret them. Read the rest of this entry »

Boris FX - BCC 6 AVX for Avid DS Now Available

by editorialstaff | July 9th, 2009

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Reprinted from a Boris FX  press release

BCC 6 AVX for DS brings nearly 180 filters to 64-bit versions of Avid DS. The release features over 30 new filters including Pixel Fixer, DV Fixer, and Smooth Tone tools; Swish Pan, Cartoon Look, Pencil Sketch, and Water Color effects; and OpenGL-accelerated effects such as 3D Extruded Image Shatter, Damaged TV, Glint, Glare, Glitter, LED, Lens Flare, Lightning, and Scanline.

Learn More or Download a Free 14-day Trial Verison

Cheating in Video Production

by jburkhart | July 2nd, 2009

800px-cheatingVideo production and editing has got to be one of the only fields in which cheating is not only accepted, it’s absolutely encouraged. Everything from flipped images to stunt butts, all designed to create the illusion of continuity. If you keep quiet about it, the audience will never know.

One of mine:

I have, on more than one occasion, created an entire scene out of thin air by simply combining long shots of characters with dialog from other scenes. I simply use the long shot where you can’t see the person’s lips move, and overlay the dialog from another scene as V.O. No one has ever caught on that it wasn’t planned that way.

But much like a magician who’s secretly dying to tell people how he did it, if you don’t let your colleagues know some of your best cheats, you won’t get the accolades you so richly deserve. So we’re all friends here, add a comment to tell us about one of your best cheats.

Editing in the Future?

by VideoChick | July 1st, 2009

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Check out this video we found of a demo on the Making Of site. It’s an editing system called “Tamper” being created by Oblong Industries, a software company that’s looking into the future with a technology called G-speak.  John Underkoffler, the creator, gave a demo of this amazing system at this year’s Sundance Festival.

The editing system’s design consists of human interaction by way of hand gestures, wearing special gloves. The user waves, flaps, grabs or spins the media being manipulated until the desired look is achieved.   Read the rest of this entry »

Matrox Graphics Unveils Triple and Quad Monitor DisplayPort M-Series Graphics Cards

by editorialstaff | June 26th, 2009

Matrox M-Series Graphics Cards Reprinted from a Matrox Graphics press release

Matrox Graphics today announced the availability of the Matrox M9138 and Matrox M9148 DisplayPort graphics cards. Expanding the M-Series product line, these new triple- and quad-monitor cards offer a remarkable 1 GB of memory, and with support for independent or stretched mode at resolutions up to 2560×1600 per output, users can drive business, industrial, and government applications on an exceptional multi-monitor platform. Read the rest of this entry »