Microphone?
Moderators: Admin, Moderator Team
-
- Junior Member
- Posts: 14
- Joined: Thu Mar 27, 2003 1:25 am
- Location: Östersund, Sweden
- Contact:
Microphone?
In this action-movie that Im making I want to use many live-sounds so to speak, but since it's located outdoors I have real big problems with wind-noise and stuff in the camera microphone and I wonder how to solve this.
I've been thinkin of using a separate mic with one of these big fluffy things on it. But the quality doesnt satisfy me!
Any suggestions?
I've been thinkin of using a separate mic with one of these big fluffy things on it. But the quality doesnt satisfy me!
Any suggestions?
-
- Newbie
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Thu May 22, 2003 10:48 pm
I don't think there is a way Jack. I spose you could record the audio onto Minidisc or any other type of recorder and use your computer to put them together.
--- I don't use Premiere at the mo so I'm not sure if you can do it with that? - but I know TMPG Enc let's you specify video and audio files to encode them.
[Edited on 23-5-2003 by MarkA87]
[Edited on 23-5-2003 by MarkA87]
--- I don't use Premiere at the mo so I'm not sure if you can do it with that? - but I know TMPG Enc let's you specify video and audio files to encode them.
[Edited on 23-5-2003 by MarkA87]
[Edited on 23-5-2003 by MarkA87]
Cheers for the tip dude.
so would you just import the video and audio as two seperate files and align them both acording to when the clapper board comes down on the video and the makes the sound on the audio?:)
No Matter Where You Go.... There You Are!!
Yep thats exactly what you can do. If you've got well planned script it may help speaking a description of the scene before you film it
"this scene 1, shot 1, take 2"
This will give you valuable info when you are trying to work out what section of sound is meant to go where. Use a clapper board as well so you've got a visual clue to work with as well.
Obviously you will also have the 'real' sound recorded on your camcorder. In premiere you will be able to switch or fade between the two source of audio.
"this scene 1, shot 1, take 2"
This will give you valuable info when you are trying to work out what section of sound is meant to go where. Use a clapper board as well so you've got a visual clue to work with as well.
Obviously you will also have the 'real' sound recorded on your camcorder. In premiere you will be able to switch or fade between the two source of audio.
another option
shoot it with no audio, dub all the lines in a foregn language and use subtitles!!
Cool?
I think So!
Cool?
I think So!
Brent
what if his video was supposed to be an english video, with english characters though
how bout just adding in sound afterwards, i done that on my first movie, but it was hard to get at the right place, i need a good movie to start and stop sounds while editing the movie...
how bout just adding in sound afterwards, i done that on my first movie, but it was hard to get at the right place, i need a good movie to start and stop sounds while editing the movie...
[url=http://www.matthawkins.co.uk/forum/member.php?action=viewpro&member=DoDGe]DoDGe[/url]
[url=http://www.home-editing.cjb.net]Home Editing[/url]
[email]dodge2k2@hotmail.com[/email]
[url=http://www.home-editing.cjb.net]Home Editing[/url]
[email]dodge2k2@hotmail.com[/email]