Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs...

34
Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording

Transcript of Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs...

Page 1: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Chapter 12Sound and Video Recording

Page 2: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Motion Picture Film Recording

• Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before being transmitted and delivered to a mass audience.

• In the early days of broadcasting, however, programs were produced and transmitted simultaneously – a “live” production.

Page 3: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Early TV

• Like many programs in this era, the popular children’s program Howdy Doody was produced and transmitted “Live,” in real time.

Page 4: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Kinescope

Prior to 1956, the kinescope was the only system available for recording a “live” TV production.

Page 5: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Magnetic Recording

With an open-reel recorder an analog audio signal is recorded to the surface of ¼” wide magnetic tape.

Page 6: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Helical Scanning

Helical scanning records picture data diagonally across the width of the tape.

Page 7: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

VideotapeThe recording surface of a videotape is divided into linear regions called tracks. Most tape-based systems support four tracks – one for video, two for audio, and one for synchronization data.

Page 8: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Professional Videotape

Analog Tape Formats

• Sony U-Matic ¾” and U-Matic SP

• Sony Betacam and Betacam SP

• Panasonic M and MII

Page 9: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Recording Formats

Recording formats have become progressively smaller over time

•U-matic tape (top)

•MiniDV (middle)

•SD Memory Card (bottom)

Page 10: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Field RecordingPrior to 1971, all field recording was done with film cameras. This meant a time delay for film processing.

Portable videotape recording led the way for electronic newsgathering (ENG).

Page 11: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Remember VHS?

• VHS, Betacam and Hi-8 are analog tape formats

• MiniDV is a digital tape format

Page 12: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Composite vs. Component Video

Three components of video: brightness, hue, and saturation.

Page 13: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Tape isn’t interchangeable

• Tape formats are not generally interchangeable.

• A videotape can can only be used in a compatible VTR.

Page 14: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Digital Tape Formats

Eliminated generational loss during editing or duplication

•D1 and D2

•Panasonic: D3 and D5

•Sony: Digital Betacam and Betacam SX

Page 15: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Large and Small Format Camcorders

• Large format – easier to use for shoulder-mounted camera work, designed for professional use

• Small format – less expensive, fewer professional controls, prosumer level quality

Page 16: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

High-Definition Tape Formats

• Sony: HDCAM and MPEG IMX

• Panasonic: D5HD

Page 17: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

HDTV

HD signals require more bandwidth for recording

Page 18: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

DV Formats

• MiniDV

• Panasonic DVCPRO and DVCPRO HD

• Sony DVCAM

• HDV

Page 19: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

DV – the Blue Book Standard

DV was a recipe book that manufacturers could use for designing a variety of recording formats for different market segments.

Page 20: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Video Compression

Video compression has two goals:

1) Reduce file size of an image by eliminating or rewriting as much of the redundant information as possible

2) Preserve the visible quality of an image

Page 21: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Video Compression (continued)

Two most commonly used methods of compression used today:

1) Intraframe (or I-frame) compression• Eliminates spatial redundancies within a

video frame

2) Interframe compression• Exploits both spatial and temporal

redundancies• All frames in the video are intracoded to

eliminate spatial redundancies

Page 22: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Spatial redundancy (single frame)

Spatial redundancy occurs within a single video frame

Page 23: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Temporal redundancy (multiple frames across time)

Temporal redundancy occurs in time over a sequence of motion picture frames

Page 24: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Apple Compressor 4

You can use video compression tools to encode your video in any number of common distribution formats. Apple Compressor 4 (pictured) is a powerful encoder, but it only runs on a Mac.

Page 25: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

MPEG Streamclip (cross-platform)

MPEG Streamclip is a free cross-platform video encoder and can be used to transcode digital video files.

Page 26: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Multiple Platforms• Your distribution preferences affect how you

encode your video

• You may want to produce a DVD or Blu-Ray disc, upload to YouTube or Vimeo, or save your video to an iPad or Android tablet

• Your video must be encoded in a format that’s appropriate for a given distribution channel

• Editors often find themselves creating multiple versions of a single project for different channels or end-users

Page 27: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Consumer Formats

• It was once not possible to record a TV show off the air

• VHS was the most popular consumer tape format for off-air recording and distribution of feature films

• Home recording made possible time-shifting

• Optical disc (DVD & BluRay) was designed to replace VHS

Page 28: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

File-Base Recording

Open standards – publically released but has specific conditions and applications for its use

• Typically drafted & approved by technical experts and stakeholders – working groups

• NGO / ISO / IEC

Proprietary standards – crafted by a single manufacturer, a small group of companies, or a large consortium of manufacturers with a shared stake in the deployment of a common format

Page 29: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

A plethora of video formats to choose from…

…don’t worry. You won’t use them all.

Page 30: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Solid-state Recording Formats

Three solid-state, nonlinear, random access formats:

• Sony Professional Disc

• Sony SxS

• Panasonic P2

Page 31: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

Propriety Card Formats

• Designed for professional users

• More robust and reliable than off-the-shelf SD cards

• More expensive and often out of the range for low-budget producers

Page 32: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

SxS

Sony introduced a series of professional cameras that record video to an SxS memory card.

Page 33: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

AVCHD

• An open standard for recording HD video that’s compatible with inexpensive flash memory card formats like SD, SDHC, and Compact Flash

• Supported by many professional editing programs

• Flash memory cards have increased in size and dropped in price

• Supported by a wide range of consumer electronic equipment

Page 34: Chapter 12 Sound and Video Recording. Motion Picture Film Recording Today, most television programs are shot, edited, and saved to tape/film/disk before.

AVCHD File Directory Structure

It’s crucial to keep the file structure intact – any discrepancy might mean your editing software won’t recognize the video files