David Horwitz
December 21st, 2009, 06:09 PM
Over the weekend I shot my first memorial event. I am now contemplating the best approach to post since it's such a sensitive thing for my clients. There are a few things that come to mind.
For the DVD label I am thinking about having some kind of background with a photo of the deceased on one side and some text on the other that says "In loving memory of 'person's name'". But I'm not sure of the kind of background to choose in this type of situation, so any suggestions would be appreciated...and what font would you suggest?
As far as the footage, I plan on asking one of the family members for still photos of the deceased (there weren't any pictures of them at the event) and music they want me to use when editing in the non-interview footage. Most of the footage is interviews. I shot a steadycam shot of entering the building and proceeding to the room where the dinner was being served, but honestly the building isn't much to look at so should I put that in? The other shots are a short prayer by the pastor, the buffet line, guests milling around, and shots of the flower arrangements. I think that's about it.
My plan is to have some of the other footage at the beginning, then the bulk will be interviews, and then maybe an outro with the flower arrangements. I am thinking the first and last clips should be a still of the deceased and "In loving memory of 'person's name"" before going into the actual event footage. I also plan on doing a menuless DVD with chapters at around 3 minutes at the nearest edit point.
Any suggestions would be much appreciated, thanks!
Edit: I should also note that at the end of the event my client requested photo prints from the footage. I told him that I didn't have the capability to print photos, so what I could do is export snapshots from the footage and give them to him on a CD so he could get them printed elsewhere. I am thinking of taking 1-3 stills per scene, any thoughts?
For the DVD label I am thinking about having some kind of background with a photo of the deceased on one side and some text on the other that says "In loving memory of 'person's name'". But I'm not sure of the kind of background to choose in this type of situation, so any suggestions would be appreciated...and what font would you suggest?
As far as the footage, I plan on asking one of the family members for still photos of the deceased (there weren't any pictures of them at the event) and music they want me to use when editing in the non-interview footage. Most of the footage is interviews. I shot a steadycam shot of entering the building and proceeding to the room where the dinner was being served, but honestly the building isn't much to look at so should I put that in? The other shots are a short prayer by the pastor, the buffet line, guests milling around, and shots of the flower arrangements. I think that's about it.
My plan is to have some of the other footage at the beginning, then the bulk will be interviews, and then maybe an outro with the flower arrangements. I am thinking the first and last clips should be a still of the deceased and "In loving memory of 'person's name"" before going into the actual event footage. I also plan on doing a menuless DVD with chapters at around 3 minutes at the nearest edit point.
Any suggestions would be much appreciated, thanks!
Edit: I should also note that at the end of the event my client requested photo prints from the footage. I told him that I didn't have the capability to print photos, so what I could do is export snapshots from the footage and give them to him on a CD so he could get them printed elsewhere. I am thinking of taking 1-3 stills per scene, any thoughts?