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Hints and Resources

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Capture!
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Movie Time!
Hints and Resources

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Pinnacle Systems Studio - Hints and Resources (Digital)

Some good rules of thumb when you’re shooting video for editing:

Check sound in the field! It’s easy to assume that that little tiny speaker on your camcorder is the reason you can’t hear your playback out in the field. Get a set of earphones, and re-shoot if things don’t sound good! It’s also extremely advisable to purchase a microphone for use with your camcorder—it reduces ambient noise, makes the sound you want to hear louder, and also adds a level of professionalism students like.

At a shoot, start the camera rolling at least 5 seconds before what you want to record has started, and stop it 5 seconds after it’s over. This is extremely important! There’s nothing worse than trying to edit a video that doesn’t have enough video pad  for capture and transitions! Video tape is cheap! Shoot more, not less!

Don’t use the overlay, fade, or other controls on your camcorder! If you do, you’re stuck with them forever—better to make those decisions at edit time!

Keep your backgrounds simple! This is generally good advice, but especially if you intend to use text overlays. Make backgrounds a solid color if possible, and make sure there’s enough room around your subject for overlays  to appear if you intend to use them. You’ll find that overlays disappear in busy backgrounds, and they will block the view of action if you don’t allow for them.

Estimate how much time you’ll need to produce your video . . . then triple it. Nothing ever goes as planned, and editing usually appears to be simpler than it ends up being. Pro studios are good at quick-editing under a deadline—that’s why they’re pros. Student projects take time!

Some FAQs and tech hints

My computer keeps locking up! Lockups can be caused by a variety of things. Remember that capturing and editing video uses massive amounts of data transfer, processor capacity, and memory, so you can’t expect it to work like other software.  If there's a silver lining to that - Studio is pretty good at auto-saving and recovering from lockups, so when you restart, you probably won't lose much - but don't count on it! Here’s some hints:

  • Make sure there’s adequate hard drive space.
  • Don’t have a lot of programs sitting on your computer desktop—they use up resident memory and processing speed just sitting there. It’s best to have the computer dedicated to video use, and nothing else, if you can get away with it!
  • Do not multi-task! Edit your video, and do nothing else on that machine until you’re done editing/rendering your video. Just ‘cause Windows says you can doesn’t mean Studio will like it!
  • Make sure a task has been executed before doing another. Don’t click ahead like you do with other programs!

Lousy sound! As you might guess, sound is a tough one. There’s several things you can do about sound before editing, fewer as you edit. See above for hints on improving sound in the field. If you’re staring at footage whose sound is poor, you can’t do much about it other than overlay music and narration through Studio. Sometimes sound is too hot on tape, and adjusting it down helps.

I can’t find my captured video files! Remember about “Naming files?” If you let the computer pick what your files are named, and where they’re put, you may not easily find them again! There’s nothing worse than 12 sub-folders inside the captured video folder, all filled with files named “Video #,” and none having anything to do with the name of the folder! It happens so often!

I want to make tapes to play in my VCR. You're stuck with the capability of your camcorder. Since Studio is completely in the digital domain, and VHS is analog, something else has to convert for you. Your camcorder will play back on an ordinary TV, so use that to record! Pinnacle (and other manufacturers) make dual DV/Analog systems, but that's an added expense you should take on only if you intend to do a lot of VHS.

I want to do animation with Studio - can I generate or find an animated GIF and put it into the software? Nope, it doesn’t support that. You have to "back-door" to get still pictures into the environment by putting them in titles, and that process handles still GIFs, but not animations. Paint Shop Pro and other programs will save animated GIFs as AVI files, which can be imported into Studio.