January 26, 2007

Will Your Home Movie DVD Last a Hundred Years?

I was at Blockbuster the other day and stood in line behind a man buying Finding Nemo for his daughter. "That’s the third time I’m buying Nemo," he lamented, "The first two got too scratched to play properly.’ He’s lucky Blockbuster has unlimited supplies of Finding Nemo. What if it was a treasured family DVD that got scratched beyond repair?

If you are going to invest the time making home movies, don't burn them on just any DVD media. DVD prices have dropped so much the little extra you pay for extra protection is pennies.

What are you protecting against?

Protection against Scratches

Irregularities on a DVD's surface can interfere with the laser beam's path, preventing the laser beam from properly focusing on a disc's recording layer. DVD Repair kits work by micro-grinding the surface to smooth out the scratches.

Protection against Fingerprints

Scratchproof DVD Fingerprints and other greasy contaminants cause smudges that stick to discs. This attracts dust and hard particles to the discs and cause more serious problems. That’s why everybody tells you not to touch the recording side with your bare fingers. Hold it by the edges. But you can tell from the miscroscopic picture that some DVDs are more resistant to smudges than others (the left side).

Protection against Dust

Conventional DVDs hold static charges that attract dusts and cause playback and recording errors. Discs with protection guard feature better anti-static, anti-dust properties, making the discs far less susceptible.

Verbatim has released DVD Rewriteable discs with VideoGard protection which makes it 40 times more resistant to scratches. It won’t protect the disc if you put a steel wool to it, but it will limit the damage of a disc that just falls onto the floor, enters the destructive hands of a younger family member, or wasn’t stored correctly.

A friend of mine put the disc through a non-scientific test against a Teon DVD Rewriteable disc that does not have VideoGard protection. He placed both disc onto a hard floor and swirled them around a few times. He repeated this 10 times, then dropped the two disc onto the floor repeatedly. After he had his fun, he flipped both disc over. Wow, I can honestly say that the Verbatim disc was not as scratched as the Teon disc. But will the disc still record? He placed it into his DVD recorder and recorded Spiderman 2. The disc recorded the movie and then played it flawlessly. However, the other disc was not even recognized by the DVD Recorder.

DVDs used to cost $2 a piece. Prices have really dropped. Right now, as I write this post, Amazon has a sale on these special Verbatim DVDs.
10pk VideoGard Protected DVDs for about $8
You can get either the DVD-R or DVD+R version.

Scratchproof Archival Video DVDDelkin Archival Gold DVDs with Scratch Armor are even tougher. They claim that the Scratch Armor's protective layer, combined with the non-corroding effects of gold make their DVDs outlast their competitors by decades. They call their DVD the 100-Year Disc.


Filed under Tape/Film Transfer by Myrtha Chang.
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January 25, 2007

Don't Hang On to Your Raw Video Tapes

It's time to dust off your video tapes and turn them into professional-looking movies. Here are 4 good reasons why:

Reason #1 - Unedited, raw video footage is painful to watch. It's choppy, jumpy, most scenes stretch out too long, and you end up pressing the Fast Forward button every two seconds.

Reason #2 - Cheaper and easier. Everything - hardware, software, accessories - are all cheaper and much easier to use.Reason #3 - Many ways to share your movies: on web, email, ipod, DVD, etc. Today, it's easy to share your video on the web. I put one up right here for your dog. S/he'll thank you for showing it to her.




Reason #4 - Video tapes/cassettes degrade with time. Have you watched your parents' video tapes lately? They are blurry? Don't blame your parents' video shooting skills. Blame Time. The longer you wait to digitize your tapes, the more they degrade. Click here on tips to slow down the degradation process.

Filed under Movie Making Tips by Myrtha Chang.
When my son was born, another parent advised me, "Don't blink". I didn't listen. I blinked, and in that one blink of an eye, my son is 9 years old today. Time flies, and what I don't capture is lost forever. But parents have a good reason for procrastinating capturing their childrens’ lives into beautifully-choreographed videos. We are too busy living in the moment. Isn’t that more important?Start Video Editing Today.  Why Wait?I’m here to tell you you can have both. And each actually enhances and enriches the other. But first, you got to examine your mindset about starting this wonderful journey to building your family’s home video collection.

1. Do you "Have To" or Do You "Want To" ?

First, when you tell yourself that you have to do something, you're implying that you're being forced to do it, so you'll automatically feel a sense of resentment and rebellion. Procrastination kicks in as a defense mechanism to keep you away from this pain. Read more

Filed under Movie Making Tips by Myrtha Chang.
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January 24, 2007

Portable Video using Your Video iPod

If you have a video iPod, you can save your movie on it and take it wherever you go.

The new 80 Gig video ipod can hold up to 100 hours of video! Portable video is a beautiful thing. When colleagues at work share photos of their children's halloween costumes or sports events, I whip out my video ipod and show my children in action. When I go camping and unpack the 85 pieces of my 4-room tent, I can watch the set up video instructions on my ipod.

Read more

Filed under Video Editing Software by Myrtha Chang.
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January 22, 2007

Leopard Gecko


Did your kids ever get the honor of bringing home the class pet during school holidays? Many years from now, they won't remember what was taught in school but they'll remember that class pet experience.

Video Editing Tips

  • Show contrast (in this case, peace, then shrieks)
  • An opening music brings out the peaceful mood in the beginning
  • Capture children's voices - something you'll miss a lot when they are grown.
Filed under Video Showcase by Myrtha Chang.
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January 21, 2007

How to Hug a Baby (Guide for Ambitious Dogs)

This one's a treat for your dog. S/he'll thank you for showing him such a valuable guide.

Note that there is no raw video footage in this video. It's just 5 pictures strung together.
Add music, captions, a little zoom and pan, lotsa humor, and presto! you put a smile on someone's face.

Learn simple video editing and make fun movies like this at www.MakeHomeMovie.com

Filed under Movie Making Tips, Video Showcase by Myrtha Chang.

Pinata Grab


This short 36-second video illustrates several ideas:

  • You can use a video to teach a lesson to kids (not to talk about your winnings, in this case).
  • You don't need a long video to tell a story. This one, as I said, is only 36 seconds.
  • Choosing the appropriate music can add a punch to your video. I am very picky about picking the right sound track accompaniment to my video.
  • It also illustrates my #1 rule for making videos: capture the story, not the event.
Filed under Video Showcase by Myrtha Chang.
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January 15, 2007

Busy Family's Strategy on Building Video Collection

Every birthday, recital and special event, I end up with miles of footage but no video."
– Ruth Waworuntu, Parent (Framingham,MA)

The problem with videotaping is that there are just so many memories to cherish: birthdays, graduations, music recitals, dance recitals, sports event, holidays. By the time you try to video tape every highlight from the first day of school to the Little League baseball game, you've got too much raw video footage and too little time to do anything with it.

To maintain a sustainable effort building your family video collection, try following the 1-2-3-Showcase! Plan.

Build a family video collection

What is the 1-2-3-Showcase! plan?

Since you can't shoot everything and edit everything you shoot, decide what you want to end up with at the end of the year. The 1-2-3-Showcase! Plan suggests that in one year , you will have created:

  • 1 video story (3 to 5 minutes)
  • 2 video vignettes (1 to 2 minutes)
  • 3 video photo shows

What’s in a Video Story?

A video story is a 3 to 5-minute video that covers a significant event in your Read more

Filed under Movie Making Tips by Myrtha Chang.

January 12, 2007

Keep Your Finished Movies Short and Sweet

I keep my finished movies short, under 3 minutes and very rarely over 5 minutes. Yes, even for 2 week Florida 8-Theme Park vacations. Why am I so hung up with that 3-minute goal?

  1. 3-minute movies are faster to edit and save. I am a busy, time-pressed mother, wife, project manager, entrepreneur, sister, teacher, friend, etc. I am too busy living in the moment to be spending all my time capturing the moment. If making movies is not fast, it's not sustainable. I'll end up with one Golden Globe Award movie and be so burnt out by the experience I won't do another one the rest of the year.
  2. People have very short time spans. Yes, even loving, doting grandparents, aunts/uncles and cousins may not sit through long drawn out movies. It’s going to break your heart when they reach for that Fast Forward button. Keep your movies short and sweet. It's a sin to bore people. When your movie is over, you want them begging for more, not be Read more

Filed under Movie Making Tips by Myrtha Chang.
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I never leave home without my digital camera. When folks get the urge to take snapshots arises at parties, they look for me. So invariably, the next morning, I end up with all these snapshots and a dozen promises to email them.


I used to email them one at a time so the large file sizes won't clog up the email system. Then I learned to resize and shrink the photos so I can't attach a few pictures in one email. But looking at static pictures doesn't bring back the party to life and resizing photos is time-consuming.

Then my brother-in-law introduced me to PhotoShow Deluxe and I love it. It lets you turn your photos into a movie-like video slideshow with captions, titles, special effects and cool transitions in minutes. And the best part? It's free if you are a Comcast internet subscriber.
3 Steps to Creating a Music Photo Video Slideshow with PhotoShow Deluxe

Step 1. Log on to www.comcast.net

Log into www.comcast.net with your username and password.

On the Comcast menu bar at the top of the screen, click the Photos icon (circled below).
Turn photos into music movie-like video

Step 2. Download the free software

You will be in the Comcast's Photos section. The FREE DOWNLOAD button for PhotoShow Deluxe will be Read more

Filed under Movie Making Tips, Video Editing Software by Myrtha Chang.
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