Archive for May, 2009

Katie & Merrick Wed May 16th, 2009

Monday, May 18th, 2009

Katie & Merrick were married in Holy Matrimony on Saturday, May 16th, at St. Thomas the Apostle Church in Ann Arbor, Michigan. At W. Cardone Productions we prepared a stunning seventeen minute love story video of this beautiful couple and showed an abbreviated 10 minute version of it at their reception that day. In their love story Katie and Merrick answer in their own words questions such as: How did you meet?; When was your first kiss?; What do you admire the most about the other?; etc. More than anything else, in the video this couple describes in detail how Merrick proposed marriage to Katie.

As you view Katie & Merrick in the park you would not have guessed that the temperature that day was a bone chilling 35F. Yet Katie & Merrick both appeared completely at ease and natural. This was not an easy task for a couple of moderate climate San Diegoites. The video does give one hint on the temperature that day–ice on the lake!

How are the Telly Awards judged?

Monday, May 18th, 2009

The judges rate each entry on a 100-point scale. Generally, entries with a score from the judges of 90 or higher are awarded a “Silver Telly” statuette, the highest honor. Entries with an average score of 70 to 89 from the judges are awarded a “Bronze Telly” statuette for outstanding achievement. Entries do not compete against each other. Rather, they compete against a high standard of excellence. The Silver Council, the judging and oversight body, is comprised of top advertising and video production professionals that are past winners of a Silver Telly, the highest honor, and have been chosen for membership based on their professional accomplishments.

What is a Telly Award?

Sunday, May 17th, 2009

tellysilverslim2The Telly Awards honor the very best local, regional, and cable television commercials and programs, as well as the finest video and film productions, and work created for the Web.

Since 1978, the Telly mission has been to strengthen the visual arts community by inspiring, promoting, and supporting creativity. The 29th Annual Telly Awards received over 14,000 entries from all 50 states and 5 continents.

W. Cardone Productions is the proud recipient of a 2008 Telly Silver award. Please visit the Telly web page where the listing is shown.

Audio Captured in Nature Videography

Saturday, May 16th, 2009

Here is another example of how powerful the human audio system is compared to modern technology.

When enjoying nature on a hike in a wildlife setting we can hear the birds chirping and other sounds of nature. We listen to those sounds and feel comforted by them as we enjoy our hike. However, try to do the same capturing the experience to video. You are in for a rude awakening.

When you play back video you have captured in nature, it is almost certain that in various spots of the video you will have audio containing annoying overhead aircraft sounds! But you say to yourself, “Those airplanes were not there when I captured this video. How did they get in?” The answer, of course, is that the airplanes were there all the while. You just did not notice them. Your brain is so powerful that it masked out those sounds allowing you to enjoy the nature sounds. The technology does not exist to do the same for your video.

In the edit room we can massage the audio masking out or at least reducing some isolated sounds. More posts will be written soon about these capabilities. However, audio massaging technology still can’t compare to the brain.

It makes you appreciate all the more magnificent the creation is.

What’s All This Light “Temperature” Stuff?

Friday, May 15th, 2009

In digital imaging there is a fundamental practice all videographers must contend with–White Balance. Without an initial white balance, white will not be white and an overall hue will pervade the picture. To obtain a white balance the videographer places a white source in front of the camera and then tells the camera that what it is currently looking at is white.

The astute reader is probably now asking, “Why isn’t white always white? What’s the big deal?” Here is another example of why human imaging capabilities far surpass electronic imaging technology of today. Suppose you were to look at a white table cloth in a dance lounge where the DJ had a lot of multi-colored lighting flooding the dance floor. Would the white table cloth still look white to you? Probably not. The exact same limitation exists for electronic imaging except that it is far more narrow. Outdoor light is a different color or temperature than indoor tungsten light. The human brain is able to process the difference and white still looks white to you whether you are outside or indoors. Electronic imaging technology has not come that far yet. Recent technology developments have enabled an auto white balance capability commonly used in consumer grade cameras which is not too bad at white balancing. However, the pro videographer cannot settle for such white balancing and usually will want to manually capture a white balance before each shot.

There are two fundamental conditions that are commonly light balanced for: outdoor and indoor. While each has variations within, generally speaking outdoor light is 5700K (degrees Kelvin) and indoor tungsten lighting is 3200K. With a camera white balanced for outdoor imaging white will have a yellow hue when captured indoors. An indoor white balanced camera will show white outdoors with a bluish hue.

Massaging Audio in the Studio Edit Room

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

All too often the audio we record captures sounds that we would prefer to leave out. Examples of this might be an overhead fan when indoors or crickets when outdoors. Technology allows us to do radical things to the audio track of video.

In many cases we can actually remove or at least reduce an isolated sound such that it becomes insignificant. One of the great examples of this is audio feedback. There have been times when ear-shattering feedback rang through a public address system as we captured our video. In all cases where we have encountered this we were able to radically reduce the feedback to the point where the viewer wonders why the people in the video are shaken.

The process of removing isolated sounds relies on a principle developed by the eighteenth century French mathemetician named Jean Baptiste Joseph Fourier.

Consider the case of removing the sound of an overhead ventilation system from the audio track of a video. In order for the removal of the offending sound to be effective we must be able to locate somewhere in the video about one second of silence in which the sound is present. An analysis is performed on that silence and the result applied to the entire audio track. In most cases the fan noise can be reduced quite effectively.

Seeing Your Bride Walk Down the Isle

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

One of the classic moments of a wedding is for the groom when he sees his bride walk down the isle with her father. We did one wedding where the groom got distracted just prior to this moment and, being nervous, didn’t realize his bride was walking down the isle until she was nearly there. The bride, of course, had trouble comprehending why her busband-to-be was pre-occupied with something else.

The groom, in moments leading up to the bride walking down the isle, often finds himself just standing at the altar “killing time.” During this time he is often inclined to carry on a conversation with his best man or the officiant in a muffled manner. DON’T DO IT!!!! Remember, you are wearing a quality UHF wireless diversity microphone that even picks up whispers. While in the released video we probably would not want to use the groom’s audio at this moment, there are times when it may be an advantage. Anything the groom says at this point will distract from the video if we were to use it so please, no talking while waiting for the bride to walk the isle.

Placing the Rings

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

One of the extremely common surprises of a wedding day comes when it is time to place the rings. Probably zero percent of couples getting married practice placing the rings on each other prior to the ceremony. Consequently, it is quite common to actually struggle at the altar getting a ring to slide to its final position on the finger.

We ask all of our couples getting married to practice placing the rings on each other prior to the ceremony. This way it will be one less potential stumbling block at the altar. Your video viewers will be able to center on feeling the emotion of the ring exchange without the distraction of an awkward moment.

Walking Down the Isle with Your Dad

Monday, May 11th, 2009

Father and Daughter Walking Down the Wedding IsleThis is probably the classic wedding day milestone of all time. What all too few people think about, however, is what the dad might be experiencing during that time. In doing wedding videography we see it all too often. That is, when the bride glances to the dad half-way down the isle and catches his eye. The video is exceptionally powerful in capturing this as the dad struggles to maintain his composure. With the video capturing 1,800 frames per minute we see various peoples’ composures either momentarily change or struggle to keep from changing.

“Upresolving” DVDs to High Definition

Sunday, May 10th, 2009

Legacy video released in standard definition on DVD will show signicantly better when played in an “upresolving” DVD player and displayed on a high definition LCD or plasma panel. When making a purchase, it is well worth the small additional cost to select a DVD player which is upresolving capable.

The Sony Playstation 3 is particularly good at upresolving DVD movies to high definition.

However, it is important to note that an upresolved DVD movie is only improved and not competition for native high definition imaging. Native HD Blu-ray movies remain far superior to upresolved DVDs.