Ed Ladendorf
December 9th, 2012, 02:48 PM
Hi Folks,
First time poster here, looking for help picking a video editing software for a specific purpose. I should probably let you know that I know little about computers or video editing in general, but I think I can tell you what I have. I’m running a Dell XPS 8300, 64 bit Windows7. It has an i7 2600 CPU running at 3.4GHZ, and 8GB RAM, upgradeable to 16GB. It has the NVIDIA GeForce GT530. The hard drive is only 500 GB, with 343 GB free, but I also have an external hard drive with 1.5TB free.
Here’s my problem: I have several 8mm movie films that were shot during the 1960s, and I copied the projection with a video camera, with the resulting files now on my computer. Much of the footage is either under or over exposed, although there is quite a bit with proper exposure. Most are not what I'd call sharp either. These files mean a lot to our family, and I’d like to be able to correct the exposure as much as possible and sharpen, but I know you can’t make something from nothing. I use Photoshop CS5, and I know I can edit the frames individually, but that would take a lifetime to get the job done using curves, exposure, or levels settings. Is there a software program that would allow me to pick “X” number of frames, and apply a correction to all of them at one time? I doubt I could correct the exposure on specific parts of the individual frames, but I’m not sure about that. I’m hoping I can find something around the $50.00 price range, and not require too many hours for the learning curve. One program I found on Cnet is VideoSpirit Pro, but I don’t really know if it’s worth considering. Any suggestions on this software or other software? Thanks for any help you might provide. The rendered file will be used to watch on a computer or TV.
First time poster here, looking for help picking a video editing software for a specific purpose. I should probably let you know that I know little about computers or video editing in general, but I think I can tell you what I have. I’m running a Dell XPS 8300, 64 bit Windows7. It has an i7 2600 CPU running at 3.4GHZ, and 8GB RAM, upgradeable to 16GB. It has the NVIDIA GeForce GT530. The hard drive is only 500 GB, with 343 GB free, but I also have an external hard drive with 1.5TB free.
Here’s my problem: I have several 8mm movie films that were shot during the 1960s, and I copied the projection with a video camera, with the resulting files now on my computer. Much of the footage is either under or over exposed, although there is quite a bit with proper exposure. Most are not what I'd call sharp either. These files mean a lot to our family, and I’d like to be able to correct the exposure as much as possible and sharpen, but I know you can’t make something from nothing. I use Photoshop CS5, and I know I can edit the frames individually, but that would take a lifetime to get the job done using curves, exposure, or levels settings. Is there a software program that would allow me to pick “X” number of frames, and apply a correction to all of them at one time? I doubt I could correct the exposure on specific parts of the individual frames, but I’m not sure about that. I’m hoping I can find something around the $50.00 price range, and not require too many hours for the learning curve. One program I found on Cnet is VideoSpirit Pro, but I don’t really know if it’s worth considering. Any suggestions on this software or other software? Thanks for any help you might provide. The rendered file will be used to watch on a computer or TV.