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HankCastello
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« Reply #4 on: November 21, 2010, 09:25:32 AM » |
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Actually, there are several posters here who have previously posted that they thought my 3 days was a rather leisurely edit.
It used to take me five to seven days, but by developing techniques to streamline things, I got it down to 3 days. I do tend to work 10 hour days, but I have to work my web development and hosting businesses in as well, oh yeah - and I'm the "handyman" when one of our rental units needs maintenance. So I rarely get to spend more than six to eight hours on editing in a single day.
Starting this year, I don't do as many weddings as before, as I am trying to be "semi-retired", but we still do business shoots and I have another music video shoot (has anyone heard of "Deathcore" heavy metal?) coming up.
Back when we did one or two weddings each weekend, I used a system where I'd separate clips by segment - opening; preps; ceremony; photo session; reception; close; credits. Each segment would go into a separate folder and the camera was the first part of the filename (c1; c2; c3; etc.). I'd lay out c3's shoot which would be the longest, since this is our static, wide camera. Then I'd place c2 and c1 in their respective positions, time-wise, in the higher tracks. Then, basically, just cut away. Forgot to mention that except where lav mics were used and the occasional sound bite from a shotgun, our digital recorder had the basic sound track for all segments except open, preps and close.
Often, at the ceremony, we'd have one or two extra cameras aimed on the parents. They made for touching cutaways at certain moments.
Yes, these were almost cookie-cutter editing projects, but that's what you have to do when you're trying to make a profit, and frankly, I think it made for some pretty good wedding videos.
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