This was the making of the multi cam for our music videos.
This would help auto sync and match up the vocals within these scenes with the
actual song. We selected all clips with
both visual and audio within them. We know how to tell if they had both because
the purple box shows just visuals and the green lines are just audio. So purple
boxes with the green lines within them show they have both. We selected these
all and right clicked which brought down a drop menu. Within the drop menu was
the option to create the muiltcam. This had features which helped sync the
audio clips together. This would open on the with all the clips there and
within the content files, there will be a file that has the muilticam editing. You
would right click on this and open it in a new timeline.
When its in a new timeline, you’d click the spanner in the
bar just above the time line and active the multicam. This begins up small windows
with the footage in it and some blank spaces. You then right click the red
boxes and go to overlay settings if you wish. This will number the boxes so if
you are changing between different footage using the keyboard, then when you
type the numbers in you know what correlates to what box. Alternatively, you can
use the mouse to click on the boxes to change. Both do the same thing although I
found using the mouse easier, so I could look at the screen more. You’d play
the mastercam footage and this is where you use the footage to edit to the song
using the visuals and beat.

Sometimes when editing the tools at the side of the timeline
become useful tools to edit within different ways. The tool selected was the ripple
tool and this was useful as it allows you to drag to clips within changing the
other clips. This means if the Mastercam footage ended and the screen went
black then you can use this to drag the next footage to replace the footage
that was lost. It also helps with continuity within other shots as the
different camera angles used, if you were to cut between two shots directly
after each other and it was telling a narrative then the ripple tool will help
you match the start and end of the two scenes, so the flow of action is continuous.
This is a time marker, and this helps you add visual footage
to the timeline without changing the sync of the other footage. This would be
used to edit to the beat of the song and then once they were placed within the
timeline, you would go to the footage and select which folder you would like to
use the footage from. You would open the folder and upon opening it two things
can happen. The footage could either open with the previews of each clip, so
you can see what is in each clip and this will help to order the footage or select
only the very few ones you wish to have, or it will stay within text form. If tis
text form and you wish to see the previews, then the box where the footage is
in has an option at the bottom called free mode which will change the text to
the boxes. Once you have decided what footage you want and what order then select
all that footage and click on the automate to sequence function. This will add
this to your timeline and replace the footage from the first-time marker you placed.
This adds the different layers of footage you can have to the song while still
keeping in time with the beat.
This is speed duration of this boxing clip which we used. To
access this, you would select the clip you wish to alter the speed of and right
click on it. Then within the drop-down menu, there will be multiple things you
can change within the clip, but you will see an option for the speed duration.
Click on that and the box above will appear. This clip was already altered by
the band, so we wanted to speed up the clip of them boxing so we increased the
number from 10 percent to 150 percent meaning the clip went faster. If we were slowing
down the clip, then we would change the numbers from between 0 and 100 for
example 50 percent. If we wanted to reverse the clip so the footage went in reverse,
then we would put minus numbers with the speed still working the same.
This is the colour wheel which could change the colour of
certain aspects within the frame. This was accessed by clicking on the colour work
space at the top where the editing work space is. We looked for what forage we
wanted to change a certain colour about and select it by clicking on it. The colour
wheel at the side would change some colours within the scene such as highlighting
Dan with the red like shown above. There are also options to change the shadows
and type of picture shown through different options. You would click on the
arrows and they would open new features. There is an option which takes longer
than just using the colour wheel but that allows you to select a certain object
within the screen and using the colour wheel when you feel like you have got everything
then change the colour to what you desire. This can have multiple effects within
the scene as it can add warmth or coldness to the shot.
This was a point within the multicam where the footage had
run out, so we used the other foot age to fill the gap left behind. In this
process we used an overlap which has the effect of playing tow clips over each
other at different opacity levels. We did this by simply using two different
tracks. Tracks are the different lane where footage and audio can go. For example,
above we can see the audio is on the first audio track and the multicam footage
is on the first video track. And the track above is the second this allows for
overlapping footage and using the opacity pen, the footage at the time can have
lower opacity meaning both clips can be played over each other.
The opacity pen was used here again as we used it to fade
out both the music and footage to black as the songs was ending. This can be
used for fade ins as well. The opacity pen can be found near the ripple tool. To
use the pen, you simply click the icon of the pen and go to the clips you want
to change the opacity for. This can be useful for the three techniques of
overlapping, fade-ins and fade-outs. You click on the clip you want to apply the
effect to and a dot on a line will appear. Dragging this up and down will
change the opacity of the piece making it the overlapping effect. To do fade-ins
and fade-outs, you click else where on the line and it adds a new dot, this dot
can be place at the end or beginning of the clip. If its at the beginning then
a fade-in has been created and at the end of the clip, the fade-out has been
created.
The technique I used to edit the footage was the razor. This
allowed use to cut the clips up and use them to edit in unique ways. The razor
tool can be found under the ripple tool and it cuts up a clip into different
sections. This allowed us to flash between different scenes without putting the
clip onto the timeline twice. This is a useful technique as it allows us to
have quick cuts between different clips and have an easier way to cut up clips.
The still from above is when the song became out of sync. To
fix this we went to the footage files and used the performances from them to
cover up the mistakes made with the clips. This allowed us to be creative with
match on action and cutting between clips effectively. We also used other techniques
like the opacity pen to cut from the performance clips back to the clips with vocals
in. the combination of techniques allows for creative shots.









Excellent work at distinction level Ruby. Well done!
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