Trying out video for the first time...

banjo_boy

Bona Fide Pater Familius
I just digitized some video to my computer and now my 50G partition is only 7G. What is the best way to reduce to file size? I have no budget to buy anything if you are going to suggest purchasing a program or hardware. Can I go from Raw file format to MPEG-2 and back without problem?

Whatever advise you have would be muchly appreciated!
 
What are you using? If its iMovie, I dont know how much help I can give you.
If you are editing you need start sorting out what you are actually going to use, make a rough cut and delete whats uneccesary.

I know of professional TV editors who frequently use only up to 36gigs. (Then 'Online' ie go '1 to 1' later), maybe you should redigitize at a lower rate?

Ideally you should have your media and clips seperate.
One is the pictures and sound (24fps etc), your clips are numbers representing the name and start/finsh points of your clip. then you can delete the former (The big part) and save the latter (much smaller) onto a floppy and redig later or at your will.
Does iMovie give you these options?

You may be happy to know that there is a FREE version of Avid out in the near future...

regards

Satellite
 
I am using iMovie. I have been told to reduce the dimensions of the movie and that could help.
 
I guess thats a form of increasing the compression ratio.
Possibly you need to find a way of doing that, then ditching the actual media and redigitizing at a normal (1 to 1) uncompressed rate when you have a final cut.

Hope that helps in some way.
 
What about cleaner 6. Does anyone know the best settings for that? If so, I have Cleaner banjo_boy, maybe that'll help. However I don't know the best settings for the program.
 
If you're using iMovie, just do your best to capture, edit, archive to digital tape (miniDV or Digital 8 probably for you) or archive to DVD and then erase it all and move on to your next project.

I'm going to make the assumption that you are editing for TV playback, like family videos or personal projects, etc.

Doing some quick math, it looks like you have captured around 3.5 hours of footage. I don't know what your specific project is, but if you've captured everything you need, just finish your poject, dump it back to tape, erase your files (backing up your project files) and move on. Does iMovie let you recapture from a project file based on timecode? I didn't think the early versions did.

Don't even think about transcoding with iMovie. iMovie isn't sophisticated enough to go there. Also, PLEASE don't resize, crop or otherwise try to manipulate your footage to save disk space. It's just going to look like crap and get you nowhere.

Final Cut is a much preferred solution, because you can log your clips before you capture, so you can get very specific and just capture exactly what you need. I don't use iMovie, but from what I recall in playing around with it, you're forced to capture on the fly or capture the whole tape at once, wasting disk space.

Additionally, FCP lets you capture in low res mode (1/10th the space) and recapture later using timecode references at high res.

Your best bet is to be very disciplined in what you capture. Only capture what you need, edit it, back it up, erase and repeat.
 
Quicktime Pro should let you resize your movie files, save them as MPEG, or whatever you need to do.
 
Also, I believe uncompressed audio is 10 MB/min, uncompressed video is something like 210 MB/min...
 
the 3ivx codec is great, min loss of quality and super small file sizes. Convert your audio to mp3s with iTunes (first export audio to aiff, then drop in iTunes,I use 192kbps), then use QuickTime Pro to put them together and you can archive them to CD, and view later. I was able to do a full movie in this format with about 150mb left on the 700 mb CD-R. And the movie looks good full screen in Quicktime, as if it were from a DVD(almost).

If you need the DV format for later editing, you need to keep those files in the DV format, or there will be a noticeable loss.

I back up my files to DVD archives, and i use FCP, simply the best at editing.
 
Back
Top