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Szenenkatalog oder so ähnlich ?

Scene Warehouse or something like that?




Question of Yllon:
August 2006

Hello dear forum members!

the digitized video material that will be cut of me and processed into a trailer, is very extensive. Therefore, I am looking for a way to catalog individual scenes.

I would therefore like to look through the movies and record single-scenes nuggets / settings (5-10 seconds), which will be used later. To this end I would like to create a sort of table that you can print out and submit later, with the name of the movies, the "reference" in min: sec, and ideally, even with a screenshot. My first idea was to create this in a Word document "of hand". This, however, degenerates into a horrible job. (I reckon with some 150 entries)

Hence my question: Is there a software that helps me? 'm Probably not the first one who wants to proceed in this manner. An automatic scene detection will leave well as sell, so to speak "without durchgefilmt was. Or is this anyway schmo approach? How do you do it differently / better?

Hope I could express my problem and understand that you can help me.

Schonmal Thank you in advance! Love Greetings - Chris




Reply nico:

Scenalyzer Life!



Reply Yllon:

Hi,

Thanks, I just tried the program times. Unfortunately, in the material contained no datestamp and it works as expected with an optical detection real bad.

What I needed, would, in principle, such a program, with the ability to gather the scenes of hand. Unfortunately Scenalyzer probably offers no manual function.



Reply stiffler:

Hi Chris
Quote:
An automatic scene detection will leave well as sell, so to speak "without durchgefilmt was. Or is this anyway schmo approach?

So hard I could not formulate it, but in case ....
Scenalyzer and other data-capture tools will work in the way of you want (to generate short clips with timestamp and picture recognition), if you know DURING the filming of each scene to settle '(ie the' record' operation a break revile). With each new 'Paste' is then automat. The current timestamp written on tape and later by the Capture tool detected and used for the separation of the clip. This makes the cut it immensely. That for the future.
Currently you remains far as I can not better spare than the opt. To use scene detection.
Gruss
ph



Reply wolfgang:

I would look at AV respect Cutty times - that can create such a scene catalogs. He also export from the material of ledigich selected scenes possible.



Reply steve:

This message has already decomposed ...



Reply Yllon:

Hello,

schonmal thank you in advance for advice on how I can do better in the future. I will be happy to heart. It certainly saves a lot of work so that if one of the start time stamps "installs". In this case, it is no longer possible, the material is quite old, partially digitized 12 years and of VHS-C.

"AVCutty" I've watched just might work. The first impressions are very promising, good tip! Synonymous've seen, that the individual scenes so synonymous can store the same in the short AVIs. So far, I really wanted to just create a list and then crop later in Adobe Premiere, etc. Is it better to divide the scenes before importing it into Adobe Premiere for example, even in some short AVIs too?



Reply Bert:

Hello,

I leave everything apart from ScenalizerLive and print me "scene from Stripes." So I then had a complete overview of what is on the hard drive. In Premiere, I then import the scenes you want in thematic folders created and the scenes with the Storyboard function sort within the folder. The contents of the folder then I move "en bloc" in the timeline and all that is left to trim to desired length and create transitional effects.

This is all definitely much faster than the previous "Batch Import Volume in Adobe Premiere with views that register in a table and set the IN / OUT points for the batch import.

Assuming, of course DV footage with the timestamps in the scene change. With the optical scene detection, I have not tried, since I only work with DV.



Reply wolfgang:

"Yllon" wrote:
Is it better to divide the scenes before importing it into Adobe Premiere for example, even in some short AVIs too?


Certainly, AVC has indeed become quite good possibilities to support the organization of material and the rough cut. If one wants to eliminate it right there useless scenes, and only prints the material as Einzeldatein, which wants to use it.




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