Ethan Piliavin
June 6th, 2007, 02:03 PM
Hi,
I just finished working on my first real, for-hire, paid real money (albeit a little) 15 minute corporate video. I rented a nice DVX-100 and did my best on lighting and all the good stuff.
I assumed that the onboard mic would be adequate, and in many cases it was, but unfortunately, there is still a lot of hiss, and sometimes there are unwanted background sounds (someone walking by, slamming a door, stomping on the floor above).
I really want this film to be the best it can be, and have been looking into hiring a professional to sweeten the audio, as I have tried myself but have really been unable to figure out how to do this myself.
So, I am wondering if anyone has some tips for me, specifically:
1) What is the going rate for this kind of thing? Do they charge flat or per second of sound, etc)
2) How do I go about finding someone, and what can I look (or listen) for in a portfolio/reel that will indicate this person knows how to do the work?
3) How is the raw material usually provided to the engineer? Do I output a minidv and send it? Will he/she need all the original gigabuyes of video files? Can I render all the different tracks with different audio problems to one straight track and send that? etc etc
4) Are some ways that I can save money, either asking for specific types of service or perhaps doing some of it myself?
5) Can someone recommend a place or engineer?
Thanks!
Ethan
I just finished working on my first real, for-hire, paid real money (albeit a little) 15 minute corporate video. I rented a nice DVX-100 and did my best on lighting and all the good stuff.
I assumed that the onboard mic would be adequate, and in many cases it was, but unfortunately, there is still a lot of hiss, and sometimes there are unwanted background sounds (someone walking by, slamming a door, stomping on the floor above).
I really want this film to be the best it can be, and have been looking into hiring a professional to sweeten the audio, as I have tried myself but have really been unable to figure out how to do this myself.
So, I am wondering if anyone has some tips for me, specifically:
1) What is the going rate for this kind of thing? Do they charge flat or per second of sound, etc)
2) How do I go about finding someone, and what can I look (or listen) for in a portfolio/reel that will indicate this person knows how to do the work?
3) How is the raw material usually provided to the engineer? Do I output a minidv and send it? Will he/she need all the original gigabuyes of video files? Can I render all the different tracks with different audio problems to one straight track and send that? etc etc
4) Are some ways that I can save money, either asking for specific types of service or perhaps doing some of it myself?
5) Can someone recommend a place or engineer?
Thanks!
Ethan