Getting Your VideoBefore you start to collect the footage for you amv, you need to have a good think about where you are going to get your footage from and how you are going to prepare it. This page is intended as a simple rundown of the options available for you to use and the pros and cons of each source. VHS - this is the worst source (although I have seen a video that captured footage from TV using a webcam). It requires a capture card, and a reasonably good one in order to maintain any quality. Only use VHS sources if there is really no other source around. A big hard drive will be required for the captures. Laserdisc - The king of analogue. Laserdisc sources are pretty good and with a good capture card you can get some very good quality footage from them. You will need good cables and a big hard drive for all the information but laserdiscs really aren't all that bad. DVDs - Plentiful, accessible, good quality and very useable. If you have an option to work from a DVD source then by all means do. The most efficient way to obtain DVD footage these days is direct digital ripping from the disc itself and this guide will show you how. However, if you are only using the DVDs for analogue capture then they will offer no vast benefit over Laserdiscs. If you have DVDs then you really should be ripping them. Game footage - a viable option for those
making GMVs, See Quu's Guide
and look in the forums for some individual guides on how to rip footage
from certain platforms. Downloaded footage - No. I don't care what
anyone says about the current quality of fansubs or anything like that,
downloaded footage is almost always second grade. They've done
a great job cleaning up the footage but even then it's often riddled
with chroma noise from TV captures and so on. Many digisubs suffer from
poor quality fades, blocking on gradients and all sorts of other issues
you are not going to get on a DVD. Not to mention the fact that if you
are going to be
violating copyright when making AMVs, the least you can do is actually
pay for the thing you've used. Which means, invariably, using DVDs
which is always the best option. For dvds of your fave fansubbed anime,
try cdjapan, amotokyo or animejungle or wait for a
western release. Official releases in Korea and Hong Kong can also be good places
to
look for footage but do not buy bootleg footage. If you are uncertain
about the legality of a site's dvds, ask on the forums or read through
the Pirate
Anime FAQ to see if it's a bootleg or not. If it looks too good to
be true (region 0, cheap, english subs) then it's probably a bootleg
and shouldn't be bought. If there happens to be some footage that you've downloaded that you really really can't find officially (like, for instance, the Daicon III and IV opening animations which are only available on a very rare laserdisc) then the best thing to do is to make clips with the codec HuffYUV, similar to the "making clips from DVDs" guide.
OK, now that you've decided on your source, there are two guides to help you use these sources:
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