I especially agree with point no. 1 in terms of having a workflow that supports your creative flow instead of hindering it. At my workplace we have a folder structure, which seems to be a bit more intricate with multiple numbered sub-folders. The main point of numbering the folders in our case is to arrange the files in a way that accommodates a typical workflow, eg. Raw Media comes before any Intermediate Files etc. It makes it intuitive to read, as you can quickly find the folder you need based on your current task in the pipeline. Learning to use a more complex folder structure like this has become second nature to us, and navigating it is lightning fast, once you gain muscle memory. And most importantly, you always know where to look in order to find the file you need. It is with folder structure as it is with software. It's a tool to solve a problem. You pick and stick to the ones that allow you to accomplish the points you presented in the video.
Thank you for your valuable tips and materials with examples from real work (workflow). I am very glad that I found your channel! This is a real godsend. Thank you for your hard work!
zold gang. Good stuff, always need more organization tips and tricks taught earlier as people are diving into editing, gfx, coloring, and finishing. It goes a long way, and makes life easier for everyone.
4:50 - You don't have to drag files from download to your folder structure every time. Chrome has an option to ask for file path each time you download something, so you can download files directly to where you want it or better of use an utility like FDM. It's an open source download manager. You can set download priorities between multiple downloads, can download torrent files as well and the biggest advantage of using a software to manage downloads is that when a download fails in the browser, it starts it over again but when it fails on FDM it continues from the point where it failed. Saves time.
Thanks for watching and for your comment! For me, dragging and dropping is faster and more intuitive than selecting a file destination. Though, I think that's a great alternative!
Thank you for watching, Dev! Thanks for the idea! In the mean time, I recorded the audio on a Shure SM7dB into a 4-710d Universal Audio Preamp, and processed using Izotope's Neutron plugin. Hope that helps!
Watch this next! ruclips.net/video/GPcbp7gxoZk/видео.html
Great stuff, it's always interesting to peek behind someone else's curtain of organization.
Thanks, Matt! I bet you have some killer tips with all the TV shows you’ve edited.
I especially agree with point no. 1 in terms of having a workflow that supports your creative flow instead of hindering it.
At my workplace we have a folder structure, which seems to be a bit more intricate with multiple numbered sub-folders.
The main point of numbering the folders in our case is to arrange the files in a way that accommodates a typical workflow, eg. Raw Media comes before any Intermediate Files etc. It makes it intuitive to read, as you can quickly find the folder you need based on your current task in the pipeline.
Learning to use a more complex folder structure like this has become second nature to us, and navigating it is lightning fast, once you gain muscle memory. And most importantly, you always know where to look in order to find the file you need.
It is with folder structure as it is with software. It's a tool to solve a problem. You pick and stick to the ones that allow you to accomplish the points you presented in the video.
Excellent points, Jacob! I fully support that workflow! Thank you for your thoughtful comment.
This is great, Austen! So practical.
Thanks so much, Scott!
Thank you for your valuable tips and materials with examples from real work (workflow). I am very glad that I found your channel! This is a real godsend. Thank you for your hard work!
You're very welcome! Thank you for the kind words!
zold gang. Good stuff, always need more organization tips and tricks taught earlier as people are diving into editing, gfx, coloring, and finishing. It goes a long way, and makes life easier for everyone.
Great to hear from you, Noah! Thanks for the kind words!
one of the best
Thank you, Vivek!
Help a lot. Gives new Perspective to organize.
Glad to hear that! Thanks for watching!
4:50 - You don't have to drag files from download to your folder structure every time. Chrome has an option to ask for file path each time you download something, so you can download files directly to where you want it or better of use an utility like FDM. It's an open source download manager. You can set download priorities between multiple downloads, can download torrent files as well and the biggest advantage of using a software to manage downloads is that when a download fails in the browser, it starts it over again but when it fails on FDM it continues from the point where it failed. Saves time.
Thanks for watching and for your comment! For me, dragging and dropping is faster and more intuitive than selecting a file destination. Though, I think that's a great alternative!
wow, this one seriously helped me. Can you make TUTORIl of how you record your audio and how you process it please.
Thank you for watching, Dev! Thanks for the idea! In the mean time, I recorded the audio on a Shure SM7dB into a 4-710d Universal Audio Preamp, and processed using Izotope's Neutron plugin. Hope that helps!
@@austenmenges Im seriously newbie for the audio section.but I'm in love with ur audio and the way you explain things.Thank you so much
I appreciate the kind words!
It has been proven scientifically that the _OLD folder is an action encoded in all editors genome.
Haha! Exactly!
i made a plugin that can organise all the files in single click. would you like to try it? :)
Nice! You can email me the details. Thanks for watching!