I was so excited to upload Evening Ink to U-tube I forgot to come back and complete the post properly. This one has the voice-over and a few more bells and whistles.... progress! All this has forced me to work out of numerous cloud platforms. Finding stuff is a joy these days. The programs and videos take enormous amounts of memory and Ram to function properly.
View of my easel, webcam left and i-Pad reference to my right.
Evening Ink 20x24 oil on linen (7/7/20 canvas 1341)
Some day someone will adopt Evening Ink and have a copy of the video to enjoy knowing how it was
created.... How cool is that?
Each day I learn a bit more about all the different tools needed to produce a video and have the greatest respect for filmmakers! It is one of the most engaging thing I've done in years. Only wish I had jumped in earlier. I don't completely have the mic thing worked out yet. However this video has sound and background music. Well, this is my second video upload hope better than the first
THE PAINTING ~ Softly Stated
20x24 oil on linen (7-25/20 canvas 13490
THE VIDEO ~ Softly Stated
Some day someone will adopt this painting and have a copy of the video to enjoy knowing how it was created.... How cool is that?
The way we communicate is changing
rapidly and more about video content than written words. Even Instagram is
filled with short clips. I would like to have a interactive virtual
gallery to show my work that does not look fake and most do right now. However, another option is doable. I think if an artist were to do a video
showing the creation of the painting and finally display the painting in a proper setting will rule if you can get through the learning curve. If real adventurous it could be like a documentary. Wouldn't it be great if a collector also had the video story to go with their favorite painting?
Well that idea was hatched up a few months ago and still not quite there. Starting from scratch it is complicated! There is a significant amount of information on U-tube to help anyone along.... and overwhelm you with information at the sometime. The silver-lining, if you are persistent eventually the video and film buzz words begin to make sense. So far I made half-a-dozen videos or so using various programs and cameras. Every step required additional equipment that also needed additional parts to get it working. Amazon was at our doorstep daily.
Splendor, on the beach
Splendor 20x24 oil on linen (6/14/20 canvas 1341)
After some silly missteps, like forgetting to turn on the camera resulting in missing sequence clips. I managed to narrow the equipment down to the I-phone paired with an Idiskk (128g) enhance external storage and a simple blue-tooth remote.
Film editing was the most tedious part of the learning curve. Adobe Premier Pro is where I started by any measure the industry standard. After months of ups and downs discovered Adobe Premier Rush, a simpler version.... and life is better. The cool thing, when watching a movie and seeing those neat special effects, I know how it was done. However, getting the external mic to work with my I-phone still eludes me.... more equipment for sure.
Time-laps is my favorite, where the video races through very quickly to a conclusion. There are several ways to do it. The phone as an option on the menu bar or in a video editing program like Adobe Premier Rush. A one-hour video can be reduced to 6 or 7-minutes without serious editing. I-phone will do it by a simple choice on the menu bar.... a perfect option for short clips on Instagram. Not tried it yet.
Because of all this research I also accumulated a pile of 20x24 test paintings with some ugly videos over the last few months. In the process of salvaging some of the videos using the time-lapse option to post on U-tube as a first step. Nothing fancy but you must start somewhere.
Fast and Furious
Before uploading I spent the day looking at U-tube tutorials which helped. A bit easier than I thought, and they have FREE music I can use in my videos....duh! I used Envato, a paid subscription for the sound track.