Scott Thibodeau
September 25th, 2012, 12:57 AM
Hey folks,
I am currently in the middle of editing a travel doc that I shot in Baja California. I'm doing voice overs and am wondering what might be my best option before I invest a lot of time in recording. This is just a self produced project so renting studio time is not in the budget. I have 3 options right now.
1) I have a USB Snowball mic from Blue Microphones. It seems to do an OK job with audio but not the best.
2) I have a Canon HF-S200 camcorder with a Canon DM-100 Directional Stereo Microphone. I'm wondering if there is a way to use the microphone via the camcorder as an input device for recording directly to my editing suite. The other option would be to record the narration to memory cards but that's a bit of work to pull the card from the camera, plug it into the computer and import it into the editing suite after each take and then put it back into the camera again.
3) Lastly I have a Samson AirLine Micro Camera Wireless System that has an audio out from the docking station. It's a small lav mic so I'm not sure how good the quality would be using this as I've only ever recorded directly into the camera with it.
Any suggestions at all would be very much appreciated. Thanks a million in advance.
Scott
I am currently in the middle of editing a travel doc that I shot in Baja California. I'm doing voice overs and am wondering what might be my best option before I invest a lot of time in recording. This is just a self produced project so renting studio time is not in the budget. I have 3 options right now.
1) I have a USB Snowball mic from Blue Microphones. It seems to do an OK job with audio but not the best.
2) I have a Canon HF-S200 camcorder with a Canon DM-100 Directional Stereo Microphone. I'm wondering if there is a way to use the microphone via the camcorder as an input device for recording directly to my editing suite. The other option would be to record the narration to memory cards but that's a bit of work to pull the card from the camera, plug it into the computer and import it into the editing suite after each take and then put it back into the camera again.
3) Lastly I have a Samson AirLine Micro Camera Wireless System that has an audio out from the docking station. It's a small lav mic so I'm not sure how good the quality would be using this as I've only ever recorded directly into the camera with it.
Any suggestions at all would be very much appreciated. Thanks a million in advance.
Scott