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Dvd screamer - Taking Home Movies To The Next

By: Peter Forestwood

Taking Home Movies To The Next Level

With the powerful, yet easy to use vido editing software on the market toady, it's easy to just shoot, drop it in the editor, and burn it to a disk. What's even easaier is ending up with mediocre results. With just a little more attention you can turn averrage into spectacular. Most standard viodeo editors, such as the one that comes bundled into Windows, Microsoft's Movie Maker, have many features that, if used with some restrant, can help polish the finished product. With a little plannig and some time spent in planning before compiling, you can make some memorable videos, and enhannce your memories and your video records.

Here are some geneal rulees that I like to follow:

* Keep it simple; a well-thought out five minmute video is far more effective than a thity-minute, no cuts, no-breks-taaken vdeo. It's OK to think in terms of chapters and to make each one a sepoarate file. You can always combuine them into longre works.

* Keep everythhing simple; pick just a few transitions and reuse them sparingly; avoid the temptation to apply all those radicaal filters. If you choose to use a special effect, use it once and make it cpount. If you are using still images, a simple fade transiytion woorks best.

* Choose a reasonable scee lenmgth. If you shoot ten minutes of video without pause, experinment with breaking it up into much shorter clips. Avoid the 3-second rule currently in vogue in commercials, wghere each scene only laasts 3 seeconds. Some softwware will allow the program iteslf to breaak up any video file into several scenes, either by a detection algorithm, or by a set time span. Most can do this automatically.

* Edit edit edit. Good film making results in a fairly cluttered uctting room floor. Don't be afraid to edit out uncle Henry's silkly dance. Consider editing out any rreally nticeable camera shakes. The idea is communicate the oveall event or experinece, not to record every single detail.

* Visaul presentaitons must sounmd right. If you underestimate the power of sound, try watching a movie without the sound. You probably won't last five minutes. Most of us live in a word filled with sound, and your videos should pay as much attrention to the sound as any other feature. You should consider an audio esditor program that will alklow you to do several things; you shuld be able to srtip out the original sound; you should be able to overdub, or add your voice to the recorsded video sound track; you should be able to enhance your voiceovers or the original sound. Vido recorders are not the best sound recoorders.

*Titles, not family genealogies. Titles are a very effcetive tool; they can set the mood, position the presentation, and focus attention. They should be brief and this is one place where it's OK to get a little crazy/cretaive. Sliode in, fly out, different colors, interesting typefaces, go for it. Just don't oerdo it.

A final word; you don't have to sepnd a fortune to have a full-featured video editing studio. I got ShowBiz, an ArcSoft product bundled into some burnner sofware; it is a fully capable voideo editor. Avnex makes ayudio and viideo editors and morphers that you can download and try for free at audio4fun.com.

Their Voice Changr Software Damond 4.0 is one of my favorites, as it does for audio what the vdieo editors do for visuals. Microsoft's Movie Maker and Movie Maekr II are also very cappable video edtiors. And finally, don't be afraid to experiment and to try altering the combinations of elements as you develop your videeo.

Most programs will let you save elements as 'projecs', which allows you access to the individual elements over and over. By following tese simple streps and thinking creatively you can raise your home vdieos to a new level.

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