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Showing posts with label Sound. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sound. Show all posts

Monday, 31 March 2014

Final Editing Process


Yesterday, I spent the majority of my day doing the final process of edting for my main task. The main thing I had to do was add the opening titles to the video so that it fitted the conventions of an opening sequence. However, this is not all I did as there were a few things that needed to be corrected. As I was doing this editing at home, I had some new programs available to me. These were Adobe Premiere Pro and Adobe After Effects.

Adobe Premiere Pro
After the initial edit, we figured that our production was at a high enough standard. However when I watched it home, I realised that some of the diegetic sound was either poor quality or was not syncronised with the action on screen. Therefore I decided to edit the sound, mainly the footsteps as they were way too loud and not in sync. I also added some extra diegetic sound such as creaking and birds in the background to try and make it more realistic. There were also some visual tweaks that needed to be made, such as slightly lengthening and shortening clips, and in some places the video had glitched and needed to be replaced. As well as this I added some of the titles that would appear in the finished piece which was made very simple by Premiere Pro. Adobe Premiere Pro as a video editing software is fantastic! The ease of use was great and the video editing options were vast.
Adobe Premiere Pro Image
Adobe After Effects
To do some of the titles for the final piece, we wanted to make some of them more dynamic and we thought the best way to do this was implementing the text into the enviroment. After research, I found the best program to use for this is Adobe After Effects. There were a variey of features available to me, however many of these effects were not possible as some features. An example is the feature known as rotoscoping. This feature puts an object from the video in a seperate layer so that you can insert things behind it while the video is in motion. Initially, this was a plan but as the rotoscoping is usually done with a still object and/or with a selection of colours in the picture. Due to the camera moving a lot and there being little difference in colour it could not pick up myself as a layer within the video and therefore did not work. However, there were some features that did work. The one I used was camera tracking. This feature is used to track all motion within a selcted clip and then find 'track points' which you can then link with text, for example. Therefore as the track point stays in place so does the text and moves along with the camera movement. I used this twice, once where it says 'Cinematography, Thomas Ewart.' and I attatched this to the ground and secondly when it says 'Starring, Abel Clarke' and this was made to look like it was written on the wall. This is fairly simple to do and is very effective. Overall, Adobe After Effects is a really good program when implementing video effects into a video. However, as I was a beginner to the program, I felt I was thrown very much in the deep end and it took me a good while to understand what I was doing.












After all this was done, the final piece is now complete. I will be putting it on my blog soon.  
    


Monday, 11 November 2013

Diegetic and Non Diegetic Sound.

Diegetic and Non Diegetic Sound is very simple. They are essentially the two different types of sound you here when watching a film or a TV programme. In this post I will talk about which each one is and some examples of them.

Diegetic Sound.
Diegetic sound is the sound which source can be seen in the scene. It's is also the sound of things that can't actually be seen but you can easily know that it is within the scene. The sounds are recorded either when the scene is actually being recorded or is put in after in post production using a foley stage, which is a room full of things to make sounds which can be interpreted into the scene. Some examples of this would be walking on gravel or an alarm clock going off. Most of the sound in a film or programme is diegetic.
Non Diegetic
Non diegetic sound is the sound which is not meant to come from the scene or is off screen. This is added afterwards on post production. They usually consist of sound effects added in like gunshots and explosions which obviously wouldn't of been able to been recorded on the day. Another example of type of Non diegetic sound is a soundtrack, which have to be added afterwards. The soundtrack is used to emphasise the feel of the film, for example a light hearted song would go with a quite qwerky scene. They are also used to set ambience. A soundtrack can be an actual music track or composed especially for the film or programme.

So in summary, Diegetic sound is sound which source can be seen or presented in the scene and Non diegetic sound is sound which isn't supposed to come from within the scene but from a source which isn't there.