Posts Tagged final cut pro

Thursday Smooth Jazz DiY Roundup

The web never stops, it’s always moving and moving. We’re going to try and catch up with it with a little web roundup. So let’s do it.

Now.

Direct Actors for Improv

Home Film School Student has a conversation with an actress about being directed in a scene where she ab-libbed quite a bit (and they wanted her too). The content of this video is valuable if you encourage actors to improv during a scene (this may be more helpful for them, actually), but my favorite parts of this video are meta. Such as the dude asking “are we ready to go” at the beginning, and this “bored camera guy” shot.

I’m trippin! Check out the videos here.

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EDLs – Edit Decision Lists

For the people who grew up in the non-linear era with Adobe Premiere and Final Cut Pro, we’re a little spoiled. Actually, a lot spoiled. We can edit something from beginning to end on our computers and not really give that much thought to the process going on underneath the hood.

That wasn’t the case before, and still isn’t the case in many production environments. You see, more often than not, we modern editors are doing something without even noticing: we’re combining offline and online editing. Essentially, it used to be that you captured much smaller, lower quality versions of files, and edited those. That was offline. Then, you’d send your edit to another department (or do it yourself) and they would do the online editing, meaning they would put in the full quality files from the source tapes, color correct, etc.

Now, you probably capture at full HD and edit at full HD because our computers can handle it. It’s simpler, and for a smaller operation, it makes sense.

But even though we’re editing in different ways, the fundamentals under the hood are still the same.

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Podcast Episode #8: Bros Icing Lance

We’re back with a newsy episode about things that you like to hear people talking about. We’re talking about Final Cut Pro rumors, a cool video we saw (that was backwards) and all about film school (or film sKooL, depending on where you go).

Panel is:

Adam (@adamfairholm)

Doug (@thedougmovement)

Lance (@omegabane)

Picks

Lance Scary Cow

Doug PASS

Adam Evernote

DiY Filmmaking Podcast Cover

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Final Cut Pro going “Prosumer”?

iCut

UPDATE: FCP Daily has pointed out that this has been denied by Apple.

Apple Insider had an interesting article yesterday about Final Cut Pro. Basically, Randy Ubillos, the man behind FCP and also the man behind the much-maligned iMovie ’09 is back at the helm of the Final Cut Studio team. Apparently, there is a makeover in the works that will bring Final Cut Pro to a more prosumer level, since Apple mainly sells Final Cut Express. There’s been some job postings for Senior UI positions, which are pretty interesting.

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3 Methods for Creating Scrolling Credits in Final Cut Pro

I love the part of the production process where you get to make the end credits. If you don’t do it first (I don’t think you should), you get to do it at the end of it all, and look back on all the people that helped, annoyed, or screwed you in the process of making your piece.

If you are working in Final Cut Pro, you probably know how to create basic scrolling text credits (if you don’t, here’s a tutorial on that). You know the kind, where everything is centered and it just goes up. For many situations, this is fine, but there are some alternative methods to creating some more attractive credits in FCP.

Credits

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Go Go Gadget Web Roundup

It’s been a little quiet around here due to our prep for this week’s podcast – all about DSLR filmmaking for DiY Filmmakers. It’s a really exciting topic, and one that takes a lot of research and pizzas. The pizzas aren’t necessary, but they help.

In the mean time, here are some cool things around the web that caught our eye that may be useful or just fun:

DSLR Film Blog

DSLR Film Homepage

I came across this blog in my research on DSLR filmmaking for this week’s podcast. (I had hoped that there was a blog dedicated to this, and I found one! I love it when the internet works like that.)

Anyways, the DSLR filmmaker blog is really great – its in-depth, technical, and gets you excited about DSLR filmmaking while at the same time bringing you the latest news on the technological advances in the DSLR world. They also highlight some DSLR short films and other DSLR-created media.

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Exporting Final Cut Pro for YouTube HD

Oh, YouTube. So slippery.

You may have been in this situation before – you’ve got your straight HD export from Final Cut Pro with the sequence settings, and it goes fine into Vimeo and just about everywhere else. But, upload it to YouTube, and it’s a mess. Low quality everything, and no HD option.

This is a little frustrating, but it can be resolved. We tried out a number of settings and found that the following created the best results.

Audio Select

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DiY-Filmmaking Podcast Episode #1: E-Bumpin’

DiY Filmmaking Podcast Cover

We here at DiY Filmmaking have starting our own podcast – it was really fun to record, and we’ll be doing these on a regular basis. The panel is:

Adam Fairholm: @adamfairholm
Doug Klinger: @thedougmovement
Lance Johnson: @omegabane

Here is the audio file:

Episode #1: E-Bumpin’

We’re submitting this to iTunes, so we’ll see how this goes. After we post this and get the Wordpress RSS feed for podcasts down, we’ll post it on the side bar to the right.

We had a little bit of trouble with an echo at the end, but we’ll get those first time technical snafus out of the way for episode 2.

Picks of the week this week are:

Lance: Macbook Pro
Doug: Scriviner
Adam: Film Festival Secrets

We also talk about Final Cut Pro, FCP Daily, Vanish Productions, and Sony Vegas Pro.

See you next episode!

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Editing Happiness is a Wacom Tablet

I often seems to me like there are two types of editing software users: the key peckers and the touchers.

If you are a key pecker you know who you are. You love editing almost entirely by key commands, and probably started on an Avid system. Key in and out points, key into the timeline – key everything. Key peckers see the video timeline and see something that is manipulated with keystrokes point by point.

But then there are the touchers, and I have to say I’m in this group. These are the ones who see a timeline and want to move it around and re-arrange the elements via a visual interface. The timeline is something fluid, and although there are some key commands involved with the left hand, the right hand is all about the motion.

My question is though: why are all of you touchers still using a mouse?

Wacom Tablet Pen

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Great Tips Blog for Final Cut Pro Power Users

We here at DiY Filmmaking are not NL editing evangelists – Doug is a Sony Vegas man, and I like to sit down with my Final Cut Pro and go to town. We keep it peaceful.

However, if you are a Final Cut user, and you know you’re way around the program pretty well, check out the FCP Daily blog. I have been a Final Cut Pro user 6 years and found a ton of great tips that I am definitely putting to use. There are also a lot of great free resources you’d probably miss otherwise.

Be aware that this is not an ideal place to start for beginning Final Cut Pro users. We’ll be posting some basic tutorials in the coming few days for those interested in learning the ropes.

So Final Cut Pro power users, put this in your feed reader and starting impressing women with these sweet tips.

FCP Tips Blog Header

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The internet is chock full of how to guides for doing pretty much anything you can think of to make films on a budget. DiY Filmmaking is a blog that brings you the best and the worst of all that, plus great tips, tutorials, and guides of our own.

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