Ben Winter
November 24th, 2005, 01:46 PM
Thought I'd mention:
I was reading the other thread here about using the Title Mix function get black 16:9 bars overlayed into the footage, when i was thinking about using all the unused, "blacked-out" space. What if one could record the timecode overtop the black bar at the top? This is what I did:
I took the 16:9 frame and moved it downward so the bottom bar was gone, then filled in the top. This way, the GL2's built-in TC display was overtop the top black bar completely. Then, I turned on Character Record, which records whatever the LCD is displaying directly onto the tape. I hit the Display/Datacode button until all I got was the timecode and record status, and--voila!--recorded timecode in my footage. Now, when I'm editing, I can have the timecode, plus whatever other information I want (I can create title cards for whatever scene I'm shooting). Editing has never been easier! No more searching through footage (which, yes, could be avoided anyway with a clipboard writing down timecodes onset). Anyway, thought I'd mention it, since it seemed like a helpful option.
I was reading the other thread here about using the Title Mix function get black 16:9 bars overlayed into the footage, when i was thinking about using all the unused, "blacked-out" space. What if one could record the timecode overtop the black bar at the top? This is what I did:
I took the 16:9 frame and moved it downward so the bottom bar was gone, then filled in the top. This way, the GL2's built-in TC display was overtop the top black bar completely. Then, I turned on Character Record, which records whatever the LCD is displaying directly onto the tape. I hit the Display/Datacode button until all I got was the timecode and record status, and--voila!--recorded timecode in my footage. Now, when I'm editing, I can have the timecode, plus whatever other information I want (I can create title cards for whatever scene I'm shooting). Editing has never been easier! No more searching through footage (which, yes, could be avoided anyway with a clipboard writing down timecodes onset). Anyway, thought I'd mention it, since it seemed like a helpful option.