Evidence of Importing and Organising Footage
Evidence of Importing and Organising Footage
These images show evidence of me importing and organising footage. First I created three folders, a 'Raw' folder that will contain all of my footage before I organise it, a 'Discard' folder that will contain footage that I do not want to include in my film and a 'Keep' folder that will contain footage that I do want to include in my film. After this I used an SD card to import all of my footage from my camera to my 'Raw' folder. Next I used a cable to import all of my footage from my phone to my 'Raw' folder. After this I began organsing the footage into the 'Discard' and 'Keep' folders. After I had finished organising my footage, I imported all of the footage from my 'Keep' folder to Adobe Premier Pro - the editing software that I will be using. Importing and organising footage it important because it allows me to see what footage I will need to edit and what footage I don't. If I didn't do this then I would forget what files I need and what files I don't as they would all be jumbled together. In addition, this will not only make the editing process smoother but it will also makes it quicker and more efficient because I can easily find the correct footage and forget about the rest. Hopefully, by doing this I will reduce the risk of my final finishing date being delayed and not mix up the high quality and low quality footage and my final film opening will be at a high quality, making it appealing to an audience.
This screen grab illustrates evidence of me importing video footage from an SD card and saving it into my 'Raw' folder.
This screen grab illustrates evidence of me importing video footage from my phone and saving it into my 'Raw' folder.
This screen grab illustrates evidence of me organising video footage from my 'Raw' folder and saving it into my 'Keep' folder.
This screen grab illustrates evidence of me organising video footage from my 'Raw' folder and saving it into my 'Discard' folder.




Comments
Post a Comment