Video Editing from Start to Finish - Part 3: Rough Assembly

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  • Опубликовано: 20 янв 2025

Комментарии • 15

  • @zhangrui7395
    @zhangrui7395 Год назад

    Thank you! This video is really helpful for motorcycle lovers and vlog makers! Great job!

  • @petercallaghan
    @petercallaghan 3 года назад

    Thanks for these excellent informative videos. Really helpful to see how you craft your adventure videos, and the techniques and little tricks you use. Will definitely be putting some of this into practice with my own stuff. Cheers!

  • @adventuristtv
    @adventuristtv 3 года назад

    I’m finding it really interesting to see someone else’s workflow. And learning great tips for streamlining the process.

    • @brentbat
      @brentbat  3 года назад

      Hey Adventurist.tv... I've watched quite a few of your videos. Yes, it's always interesting if you can watch somebody else's workflow, inevitably they do things a different way and you can often pick up some cool tips.
      Glad you are finding it useful.

  • @StevesBikes01
    @StevesBikes01 3 года назад

    Great material Brent, i'm up to episode three. When using multiple cameras, I make sure they are all set to the exact same date and time. When doing rough assembly I drop them all into a single folder and then sort by date and time created. Then I can drop them all into iMovie. This gives me a time sequence rough edit without having to cut and paste later. Is there some downside to this that I don't yet understand? Cheers

    • @brentbat
      @brentbat  3 года назад

      Hey Steve, that should work fine, So there are 2 approaches then:
      The way I do it > Review footage and ADD it to the timeline to create the roughcut
      OR
      Your method > Throw it all on the timeline and SUBTRACT the stuff that is no good.
      Both are totally valid methods, and in terms of efficiency, it will depend on your shooting style. If you are fairly conservative in the way you shoot, then your way is probably more efficient because you are likely to use more of your shots and you are Subtracting a relatively small amount of "dud shots".
      However, I tend to shoot a LOT of footage.... I'll leave the GoPro running heaps and sometimes I might get 30min of footage and not use a single shot. So it is more efficient for my shooting style to use the additive approach and just pull out the good shots, rather than delete the majority of my footage.
      I hope that makes sense.

  • @orpaztron
    @orpaztron 3 года назад

    Thanks for your effort and time Brent. The work process for me is quite similar, only it is a pair of cameras at most.
    What kind of videos one should do logging instead of loading all the material into premier and transfer it via proxy process?
    -(to know in advance what part you take from each video)

    • @brentbat
      @brentbat  3 года назад

      Hey Dror
      I don't do any formal logging process, but I guess I'm kinda logging in my head as I'm shooting, for example, I will remember if I've captured a really cool drone shot or a "hero" gopro shot. But I just dump ALL my material into Premiere and build proxies for everything. The reason I do that is that I have a 2TB SSD drive that I use for editing, so I have plenty of space. Once I'm finished with the edit, I then use the Project Manager (found at the bottom of the file menu) to archive my project to another slower hard drive for storage/archiving, I can choose to not copy across any files that weren't used in my final edit.
      I hope that makes sense.

    • @orpaztron
      @orpaztron 3 года назад

      @@brentbat -yes it's make sense! thanks

  • @theobviouschicken
    @theobviouschicken Год назад

    Super useful to see someone elses work flow and the assembly. I had been doing it all wrong based on the speed you assembled that edit. I am going to implement your methodology for sure. 👍Just noticed I wasnt subscribed. Rectified that! Going through this playlist slowly and completely. Not sure if you have been asked this but do you start with a storyboard before you film or do you wing it ?

    • @brentbat
      @brentbat  Год назад

      Hey there, glad you are finding the videos useful. So regarding the question of storyboard, I never formally starboard things, but if I know what the story is in my mind... I'll think a bit about specific shots that I do want to grab. But with adventure bike riding, often you don't know what the story is until the ride is over... that is one reason why I never try to narrate the video while I'm riding. A good example of this is the last day of the Flinders ride.... I never could have predicted the two failures we would encounter on that ride. ruclips.net/video/K-d4tEy2sDI/видео.html

  • @vooshmoozik6185
    @vooshmoozik6185 Год назад

    to save people some viewing time, (sorry brent), he finishes gathering his shots around 25:10