View Full Version : Mixing super8 and digital (clips)


Chris P. Jones
July 8th, 2008, 04:40 PM
Cross post from VU.

My editor Chance and I learned a lot in creating the biggest wedding film we've had to date - mixing lots of rehearsal dinner toasts throughout the course of everything else, and enjoying the speedier editing that comes when editing super8 film (and not having to worry about that dang audio track!):

http://masonjarfilms.typepad.com/my_weblog/2008/07/event-design-van-wyck-van-wyckwedding-planners-crescent-city-consultants-pat-denechaudceremony-holy-name-of-jesu.html

I will be posting about 80% of the total of the wedding film on my blog over the course of the next 3 weeks, so you won't have the full experience of how we tied everything together, but most of it.

I might release the film in its entirety with a commentary track to explain more of our thinking throughout the process. We learned a lot while making it...not only about shot selection and editing style, but about marketing to a new strata of the high-end.

Comments, questions, and criticism are welcome. I hope I have time to address them all!

jones

Joe Allen Rosenberger
July 10th, 2008, 04:13 PM
...loved it Chris, really nice job mixing the formats. The vid shows lot's of New Orleans's character.

Cheers, Joe




Cross post from VU.

My editor Chance and I learned a lot in creating the biggest wedding film we've had to date - mixing lots of rehearsal dinner toasts throughout the course of everything else, and enjoying the speedier editing that comes when editing super8 film (and not having to worry about that dang audio track!):

http://masonjarfilms.typepad.com/my_weblog/2008/07/event-design-van-wyck-van-wyckwedding-planners-crescent-city-consultants-pat-denechaudceremony-holy-name-of-jesu.html

I will be posting about 80% of the total of the wedding film on my blog over the course of the next 3 weeks, so you won't have the full experience of how we tied everything together, but most of it.

I might release the film in its entirety with a commentary track to explain more of our thinking throughout the process. We learned a lot while making it...not only about shot selection and editing style, but about marketing to a new strata of the high-end.

Comments, questions, and criticism are welcome. I hope I have time to address them all!

jones

Chris P. Jones
July 14th, 2008, 05:07 PM
thanks! hard to not find a lot to shoot in new orleans, it has so much character. point and shoot! (well, close)

plenty of more clips up this week and next on the blog to round out the story.

http://masonjarfilms.typepad.com/

jones