Getting back in the saddle
- DJ_Izumi
- Joined: Wed Oct 03, 2001 8:29 am
- Location: Canada
- Contact:
Getting back in the saddle
God, I think I did my last AMV in 2007? Since then I've gone to school, then another school, right now I'm sitting at a workstation and killing time while it renders exploding air liners for Discovery Channel... After watching Madoka for the third time (And still sobbing for episodes 10 and 12) I thought to myself 'I think I'd like to do a western style movie trailer focusing on Homura for Madoka'. For once, doing an original trailer using the dub audio, rather than borrowing audio from an existing trailer.
Geez, AMV editing has gotten way easier...
I used to convert chunks of episodes to HuffYUV or Lagarith so they'd play nice in Premiere. I'd never even done a 1080p AMV before and back then the idea of doing an AMV at 1080p seemed daunting in regard to storage and I/O. ...I dropped the elementary h.264 streams ripped from the BluRay into Premiere and... They just worked! D: I work with h.264 footage from cameras and even 16bpc EXR sequences and 14bpc RED footage... Why does h.264 anime footage 'just working' in Premiere amaze me?
Software? Better torrent a version of Premiere that I like... Oh yeah, I have a Creative Cloud subscription till Jan 2015 thanks to school. @_@
How am I ever going to work with 5.1 streams? Oh yeah, 5.1 is no problem for Audition now.
Music? ...Got an account at Sony's production music site. Who wants some 96khz HD Two Steps from Hell? :X
The hardware? The hexcore i7 4930K over clocked to 4.6ghz
Skills? Does visual effects compositing training translate into advanced AMV editing skills? Uhh... Good question, I have no idea. :X
...So let's see if I still actually know how to do this.
Geez, AMV editing has gotten way easier...
I used to convert chunks of episodes to HuffYUV or Lagarith so they'd play nice in Premiere. I'd never even done a 1080p AMV before and back then the idea of doing an AMV at 1080p seemed daunting in regard to storage and I/O. ...I dropped the elementary h.264 streams ripped from the BluRay into Premiere and... They just worked! D: I work with h.264 footage from cameras and even 16bpc EXR sequences and 14bpc RED footage... Why does h.264 anime footage 'just working' in Premiere amaze me?
Software? Better torrent a version of Premiere that I like... Oh yeah, I have a Creative Cloud subscription till Jan 2015 thanks to school. @_@
How am I ever going to work with 5.1 streams? Oh yeah, 5.1 is no problem for Audition now.
Music? ...Got an account at Sony's production music site. Who wants some 96khz HD Two Steps from Hell? :X
The hardware? The hexcore i7 4930K over clocked to 4.6ghz
Skills? Does visual effects compositing training translate into advanced AMV editing skills? Uhh... Good question, I have no idea. :X
...So let's see if I still actually know how to do this.
- DJ_Izumi
- Joined: Wed Oct 03, 2001 8:29 am
- Location: Canada
- Contact:
Re: Getting back in the saddle
Er, Creative Cloud itll Jan 2016 that is. Hey look, there still isn't an edit button! Some things never change! 

- dreamawake
- Prodigal Pen-Throttle
- Joined: Mon Apr 17, 2006 1:50 pm
- Status: NMEs Prodigy
- Location: Nowheresville, NJ
- Contact:
- Shui
- Shuitcake
- Joined: Sun Jul 02, 2006 6:27 am
- seasons
- Joined: Wed Jul 22, 2009 12:31 pm
- Contact:
Re: Getting back in the saddle
Saw this at the college bookstore and was sort of interested (would like to upgrade from CS4 at some point), but it's a subscription that expires after a year or two? I think I'll pass.DJ_Izumi wrote:Er, Creative Cloud itll Jan 2016 that is. Hey look, there still isn't an edit button! Some things never change!
- DJ_Izumi
- Joined: Wed Oct 03, 2001 8:29 am
- Location: Canada
- Contact:
Re: Getting back in the saddle
Well, firstly, mine so far has been free. I went to two schools, a two year program and then a one year program, the first school's free software credentials stayed good after I graduated and I was able to get my first 12 months of Creative Cloud. Soon after I graduated my second school they FINALLY got their Creative Cloud deal from Adobe and that appeared to stack. So I'm good with Creative Cloud unpaid till Jan 2016. I also got free copies of CS5.5 and CS6 Master Editions while at school. (And 2 Win7Ultimate keys, 2 Win7Pro keys, and 2 Win8.1Pro keys...)seasons wrote:Saw this at the college bookstore and was sort of interested (would like to upgrade from CS4 at some point), but it's a subscription that expires after a year or two? I think I'll pass.DJ_Izumi wrote:Er, Creative Cloud itll Jan 2016 that is. Hey look, there still isn't an edit button! Some things never change!
And all I had to do was give them $30 000 in tuition!

Ontop of that, really, considerations the cost of CS6 master edition, vs the subscription which seems to get yearly updates and entitles you to those updates it's not a bad prices if you considder that you'll get frequent updates to the software and never worry that you were going out of date.
- Replay Studios
- A Studio Within A Studio
- Joined: Sat Oct 04, 2008 8:10 pm
- Status: Replaying myself
Re: Getting back in the saddle
Welcome back ^^
- Mol
- Strawberry Pie
- Joined: Thu Feb 22, 2007 2:28 am
- Status: sutatS
- Location: Sweden
- Contact:
Re: Getting back in the saddle
I wish there was editing program using mind control so wouldn't have click so much
Thought i find it harder to find any music that i would want to edit rather than editing itself these days
I feel like that tuition is kinda high for something which you can find most of in google/yt
Do they teach how to be creative? 

Thought i find it harder to find any music that i would want to edit rather than editing itself these days

I feel like that tuition is kinda high for something which you can find most of in google/yt


- DJ_Izumi
- Joined: Wed Oct 03, 2001 8:29 am
- Location: Canada
- Contact:
Re: Getting back in the saddle
There's actually a lot that you CAN'T learn easily by looking at online tutorials. The biggest thing would be actual equipment experience. The first school I went to had a mixed focus on 'film/documentary', studio broadcasting, and live broadcasting. Simply put, the school had a small multicamera live broadcasting news studio. I'm talking about the big 18 monitor wall control room kinda stuff. (Though in my opinion, broadcast news is an unemployment factory). The live broadcasting, which I had no interest in, but is totally growing (I mean shit, we broadcast POKER now. Do you know how many hours of the Olympics we broadcast vs just 10-15 years ago?) And the school had the whole 'air pack', basically a broadcasting studio that you could fit in modular chunks into a large uHaul.M'o'l wrote:I feel like that tuition is kinda high for something which you can find most of in google/ytDo they teach how to be creative?
The post grad school I went to was a bigger deal. The school had entire professional lighting setups, RED MX Cameras, time code slates, mics, mixers, HD Audio recorders, and literally everything you'd need on a filmset (Though a bit older, more the hardware you'd see circa 2008 or so, but it's a SCHOOL). Entire AVID Nitrus turn key systems. My compositing professor worked in things like Resident Evil, Flash Point, Boardwalk Empire and other stuff. The school also didn't teach things like After Effects which is rather low level, it taught Nuke. You'll find not NEARLY as many tutorials online for Nuke. Even less is what I use at work, Fusion. Both Nuke and Fusion are node based compositing programs and admittedly scary powerful. Our workstations at school were just about demonic, HP visual effects work stations running DUAL 8-Core Intel E5 processors. 16 cores... Even the machines I work with for a paycheque aren't that stupidly powerful. I did sound editing on a 24 channel mixer powered in a 5.1 surround suite.
We did entire short films with budgets in the range of about $5000, using an entire uHaul of gear, expensive gear. The lenses for the RED were like $5000 replacement cost all on their own.
You can learn a good bit about EDITING online, in fact my history in AMV's left me with a leg up in editing and understanding video codecs and I could remember numbers like '23.976' without even trying. But when it came to dealing cameras, audio, actually working on set, working with the workflow in Shotgun when multiple people are working on multiple shots for the same visual effects project... There's a LOT I didn't know. And it's a lot of experience on the kind of hardware that the semi-professionals shooting on DSLRs and doing YouTube tutorials couldn't afford.
If I hadn't gone to school like I did, I wouldn't be doing the paid industry job I'm doing now.
- Mol
- Strawberry Pie
- Joined: Thu Feb 22, 2007 2:28 am
- Status: sutatS
- Location: Sweden
- Contact:
Re: Getting back in the saddle
Yeah, pre-production kinda went over my head
. Out of all of that i only got try some avid programs, and nuke- pretty interesting alternative for ae.
I'm now mostly curious about your road to hire- school obviously helped, but contacts, or what decided? School? Sending your cv to disney ?:dino:
Think i would give a editing school a shot if decent ones weren't so far away
, now i feel too old 

I'm now mostly curious about your road to hire- school obviously helped, but contacts, or what decided? School? Sending your cv to disney ?:dino:
Think i would give a editing school a shot if decent ones weren't so far away

