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June 20th, 2007, 08:51 AM | #1 |
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Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Wisconsin
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Uncompressed footage on DVD? in Avid Liquid 7.2
One of my clients is asking me to videotape his wedding ceremony, ~ 1 hour and to give him the " raw" footage uncompressed on DVD ? (so he could do the editing himself) ....i'll shoot in SD with my JVC GY-HD100 ......
I use Avid Liquid 7.2 and need advice how to do this ? I really appreciate your help. |
June 20th, 2007, 12:07 PM | #2 |
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Lots of DVD's!!
I have Liquid 7.2 also, so what I would do is import all your video from the camcorder (miniDV tapes) and put it on your time line and then fuse parts of it so each fused piece is about 4 gig in size (18-19 minutes worth). Then burn each fused AVI to a DVD as a data file using Nero or some other burning utility. You should end up with about 3-4 DVD's.
Then your customer will have to just import the AVI's. Hope this helps. Make sure you charge for your work, your giving him the ability to make his own wedding video and not get it from you! Jeff PS and by the way, it will not be uncompressed as it is on DV tape which is a compressed format.
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June 20th, 2007, 12:16 PM | #3 |
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When you Export to Fuse, your fuse should include audio if possible and not reimport as options. I think it is a seperate option, but you may need to create it. I have done so many iterations, I forget what the defaults are.
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June 20th, 2007, 02:34 PM | #4 |
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You can skip the fuse and just start doing a drag and drop of the AVI files into the folder for your DVD burning application. When the disk gets close to full, burn it and then start the next one. This will give your client the real raw footage that is cut where it was supposed to be cut and not a bunch of shots all lumped into one file that they will need to cut up. If you go slightly over just take out the last clip you dragged over and use it on the next disk. This will save you a lot of time by not having to use Liquid to group the shots and fuse. In a sense you would be doing a very very very rough edit which you are not getting paid for.
If this was a single shot for a long period of time then you will have to chop it up in Liquid. Note: I usually use Scenalyzer Live to capture my video and in the program you can set it to capture the video in 4GB chunks even if the tape keeps rolling as a single shot. The 4GB chunks are seemless and can be lined up again in a NLE with no dropped or missing frames at all. This feature would work great for this situation since the files would be just small enough to fit on a DVD. |
August 5th, 2007, 04:45 AM | #5 | |
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Quote:
S.
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