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Includes CD-ROM with footage you can use to practice editing! THE DIGITAL WAY TO CUT VIDEO Superb solutions to edit your video. For the amateur, turn your family videos into stories. For the professional, learn to cut your films using the latest digital video tips and tricks. A pair of award-winning professionals share their insights. Editing Digital Video explains how to use any tool -- from iMovie or Premiere to appliances like Casablanca and Screenplay or professional systems such as Avid, Discreet, Media 100 -- to turn your imagination into results fast. Quickly acquire the skills you need * EDIT COMMERCIALS, DOCUMENTARIES, FEATURE FILMS, AND MUSIC VIDEOS * WORK WITH VIDEO, DVD, AND WEB-BASED MEDIA * TAKE ADVANTAGE OF PROVEN TECHNIQUES FROM THE PROS Anyone from amateurs to students to professionals can learn to edit and tell compelling stories using the results-oriented approach in Editing Digital Video. Plus, a companion CD-ROM with footage and exercises lets you practice on any system. With clear illustrations and a light touch, Editing Digital Video will guide you through the finer points * Navigating the desktop * Basic and advanced editing * Creating Impact * Organizing Projects * Keys, mattes, and layering * Titles and Effects * Audio * Digital video formats * Postproduction Workflow * Editing Terminology * Keyboard Shortcuts * And much, much more! With Editing Digital Video, you’ll finally unleash your creativity. Learn more in one session than you would from any user manual. A refreshingly realistic approach!
I purchased this book thinking it would help me craft my editing skills somewhat better. I'm a bit self-taught when it comes to video editing, so it mainly shared theories and facts about editing than general problem solving. I did like learning about the differences between the slip and slide tools, and advice for lip syncing and tips on when it's best to place edit points. Some of it seems like common sense, but it's always good to get a refresher.
I would have liked a more in depth look at composition. It really only touched on the theory rather than how you can incorporate it. I also thought the appendix was extremely long and filled with recommended sources to watch that I likely wouldn't watch. Unless it provides an actual case study about each recommended video, considering this book is supposed to be for beginners, I would imagine a lot would go over a new editor's head and it would just be a waste of time.
I do like that they supply you with a DVD that you can use to edit a sample video. The only problem is that it's hard to know if you did it right. I mean, I THINK I did it right. I can understand that there may not necessarily be a right since no one person will edit the same way.
The book is certainly invaluable in reiterating certain points that you may forget when editing as well as some organizational tips, but I almost wonder if I understand it better because I had been doing it myself. I think someone that is fresh to editing could find all of the points a little overwhelming at first.
I purchased this book thinking it would help me craft my editing skills somewhat better. I'm a bit self-taught when it comes to video editing, so it mainly shared theories and facts about editing than general problem solving. I did like learning about the differences between the slip and slide tools, and advice for lip syncing and tips on when it's best to place edit points. Some of it seems like common sense, but it's always good to get a refresher.
I would have liked a more in depth look at composition. It really only touched on the theory rather than how you can incorporate it. I also thought the appendix was extremely long and filled with recommended sources to watch that I likely wouldn't watch. Unless it provides an actual case study about each recommended video, considering this book is supposed to be for beginners, I would imagine a lot would go over a new editor's head and it would just be a waste of time.
I do like that they supply you with a DVD that you can use to edit a sample video. The only problem is that it's hard to know if you did it right. I mean, I THINK I did it right. I can understand that there may not necessarily be a right since no one person will edit the same way.
The book is certainly invaluable in reiterating certain points that you may forget when editing as well as some organizational tips, but I almost wonder if I understand it better because I had been doing it myself. I think someone that is fresh to editing could find all of the points a little overwhelming at first.