Imovie and 8mm film

Is there anyone out there who scans 8mm film through to the mac? if so, what is a good brand to purchase and do you upload to you digital movie camera and then to imovie?
last qustion - any chance you can purchase a scanner that does slides and 8 mil film. i have bags full of slides and film from my childhood that my dad shot and i really want to get it on dvd.
thanks a million,
movie lady

I believe most scanners have slide adapters that can be purchased. My sister-in-law did all of he fathers old slides this way, but they had to be scanned on at a time. She has patience.
As far as 8mm film goes,you can project the image onto a white screen and use your dv camera to capture the footage, but you have to adjust your video camera shutter speed to 24 frames per second, to match the shutter speed to the 8mm . You can purchase telecine equipment that will do the job, but the profesionals have the best equipment that capture the movies directly to 3ccd cameras. You will have all of your films saved onto mini dv tapes. If you are talking about transfering a few hours worth of film, it hardly pays to purchase the high end equipment. You probably only want to do this once , so why spend money and have "adequate" or poor results?
I had over ten hours of silent 8mm film and super 8mm sound film transfered by Home Movie Depot. The results were fantastic, but expecxt to pay approximatley $0.15/foot.
They clean the film, and correct for lighting variations. I had some problems with some of the results, and they redid that portion, no questions asked.
Since you get the films back on mini dv's, you can load the footage onto your mac & edit away, and burn your dvd's.
http://www.homemoviedepot.com/

Similar Messages

  • Convert old 8mm film to what 'format' to edit in iMovie?

    I have selected a service to convert and save my families old 8mm film to a hard drive (which I will be supplying). I would like to import the movies (files) from the HD into iMovie for editing and eventual burn to DVD. What format should the service save the files in? Quicktime .mov? or something else? The service lists: Raw DV or AVI Type 1 or Type 2 or Type 2c or Matrox AVI or Avid DV OMF.
    Mac G5   Mac OS X (10.4.9)   <<br>
    Powerbook G5   Mac OS X (10.4.9)  

    Hi Tyler!
    Of the options you list I would choose 'Raw DV'. iMovie is designed to handle a DV stream @ 13GB per hour, for editing and transfer to iDVD.
    But ask the vendor to confirm that his 'Raw DV' is designed for transfer to iMovie 6 on an Apple Mac, and before he loads up the hard drive you are supplying make sure that it has been formatted as Mac OS Extended (Journaled).

  • 8mm film to IMovie

    Does anyone have a suggestion as to how I can get from 8mm film to IMovie?
    I had 400 feet of 8mm transferred to DVD But IMovie won’t accept it. Says QuickTime can’t parse it.
    Called Apple and asked if QuickTimePro might do the job. The answer was yes and 100 bucks later I had Toast 8 Titanium. Rather than send it back( I thought I’d ordered QuickTime Pro) I called Roxio and asked if Toast would convert the DVD to something IMovie could use. Again, the answer was yes.
    When I used Toast it gave me a message that it couldn’t do the job because the DVD “might be copy protected”. A call to the DVD provider indicated that the DVD was copy protected ... even tho’ it is my film on the DVD.
    Someone said to try MacTheRipper. I did and it did rip the movie from the DVD but it was still “copy protected”. Running that through Toast didn’t help.
    On online site suggests (buying) a digital movie camera and recording my movies from the projected movies, then transferring that to my MAC. I’ll probably do that if I can’t find something simpler.
    I still have over 7,000 feet of 8 and super 8 film to work with so, if anyone has a suggestion I’d very much appreciate it?
    For info, I’m very much an amateur.
    IMAC G 5 (Intel) IMovie 6.03 QuickTime 7.0.3
    and, I just downloaded all the info in IMovie comments re: help with deciding camcorder purchase .
    Thanks,
    JIm

    A fascinating project!
    My older brother had 4 hours of (silent) 8mm cine film dating back to 1958-1980 (when he finally bought a video camera!). He wanted me to convert them to carefully edited DVDs, with music, sound effects, titles and so on. Like a madman I accepted the challenge! To make life easier he lives in Belgium and uses a PC!
    The process, to cut this short, was as follows:
    At considerable expense he had all the film transferred to four DVDs in some PC-only friendly mpeg codec, and sent them to me.
    I used Streamclip and the Apple mpeg thingy (saving time by not loking it up) to convert these to Quicktime DV files. To make life even easier, the Belgian moron who did the conversion to DVDs had not done so in chronologal order!
    That made for a very large QT file, which I imported into iMovie, and set about carving it into date order, re-exporting the various years to QT as individual files, and then importing into iMovie projects to edit.
    Only a couple of months later I had it organised into three projects, each of an hour or so, beautifully edited with titles, transitions, music, sound effects and other bells and whistles, and burnt them to 3 DVDs. I was generally agreed that I deserved an Oscar for technical merit!
    That was just to let you know that it can be done!
    Your only real hurdle is the copy protection. Can you get a fresh set that is NOT copy protected?
    But before you even start I heartily recommend that you update your OS and all software to the latest versions, particularly Quicktime, and make that Pro.

  • I recently had some 8mm film transferred to DVD. I am trying to edit the film clips using Premier Elements 4.0.  Some of the film clips copy into the project but others don't. I tried copying the VOB filed onto my hard drive and then changing the file ext

    I recently had some 8mm film transferred to DVD. I am trying to edit the film clips using Premier Elements 4.0. so I can reburn the films on a single BluRay disc. Some of the film clips copy into the project but others don't. I tried copying the VOB filed onto my hard drive and then changing the file extensions on the VOB files to MPEG but this was no help. Some of the VOB files contain numerous film clips but my software does not appear to be able to recognize them as such. I need to know if replacing my old Premier Elements with the new Version 13 would solve this problem or not. Any advice would be greatly appreciated!
    Bob

    Bob
    What do you have now.....
    What computer operating system do you have?
    We can go into the finer points of source and your intentions, but for now it would appear that you are using SD 4:3 source media to get to a HD 16:9 result. Lots to discuss in this regard.
    What was given to you on the DVD disc? DVD-VIDEO 4:3 or something else?
    If DVD-VIDEO on DVD disc, you should expect to find on the disc a folder named VIDEO_TS. That is your target for your video files.
    If you were given a DVD-VIDEO on DVD disc, then all you want from it are the video files, specifically
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    VTS_02_1.VOB, and so on. How many files you have beyond the VTS_01_1.VOB file will depend on the size of the DVD-VIDEO.
    Does the above scenario apply to you?
    The alternative might be someone giving a DVD disc (data disc) which contains just the VTS files mentioned which were copied from
    the VIDEO_TS Folder. So, you do not get the whole VIDEO_TS Folder, just the essential video files. Does this scenario apply to you.
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    Consider...Premiere Elements 4 and if you have DVD-VIDEO on DVD....
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    3. Go to
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    Set the Source in the latter dialog for the drive which has your DVD disc inserted in its tray
    You should see your VTS_01_1.VOB thumbnail in the "Adobe Premiere Elements - Media Downloader" Advanced dialog.
    With this VOB selected, click on Get Media to get the file from there into the project.
    Should work fine.
    Complications may be involved if the people who processed your footage gave you something other what is described above.
    Please review and consider, and then we can plan our project strategy accordingly.
    Thank you.
    ATR

  • I produced a film in iMovie and send it to iDVD to make a DVD with a theme. When everything was ready it starts at my mac-computer. But at the TV the theme always comes at the end of the film not at the beginning. What have I to change, what´s wrong?

    I produced a film in imovie and send it to idvd to make a dvd with a theme. After finishing all the dvd starts in my mac-computer and first comes the theme and then the film.
    But when I start it with a dvd-recorder at tv first the film comes an at the end of the film the theme comes. What did I wrong? Where is my mistake?

    Hi
    A. Do not Use - Share to iDVD - in any iMovie version at all !
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    C. in iMovie'08 to 11 -  Share to Media Browser and as LARGE - NOT HD or other resolution as quality will be even worse
    - in iMovie HD6 - just close it and from within iDVD import the iMovie movie project icon (with a Star on it)
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    D. When in iDVD - see to that in the Lay-out menu (when it looks like a box-plott) there ARE NOTHING in the upper left most box (Auto Start box). As this overruns any Menu.
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  • I have problems with my films that become slightly jerky after I have imported and edited them in iMovie and then burned them onto a DVD using iDVD. I can see the weak jerkiness when panning in both laterally and vertically. I shoot with a camcorder Canon

    I have problems with my films that become slightly jerky after I have imported
    and edited them in iMovie and then burned them onto a DVD using iDVD.
    I can see the weak jerkiness when panning in both laterally
    and vertically.
    I shoot with a camcorder Canon Vixia HF10. The camera has been set to deliver HD quality (1920x1080). But I have accidentally filmed with a frame rate of 60 (?).
    When I import the films in iMovie I have been asked if I want to change to frame rate 30 (instead of 25). I have chosen 30.
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    I have problems with my films that become slightly jerky after I have imported
    and edited them in iMovie and then burned them onto a DVD using iDVD.
    I can see the weak jerkiness when panning in both laterally
    and vertically.
    I shoot with a camcorder Canon Vixia HF10. The camera has been set to deliver HD quality (1920x1080). But I have accidentally filmed with a frame rate of 60 (?).
    When I import the films in iMovie I have been asked if I want to change to frame rate 30 (instead of 25). I have chosen 30.
    Could it be the setting of a frame rate 60 in my camcorder that causes jerkiness when panning or what else?

  • I am attempting to convert 8mm video cassettes to dvd using a video cassette player, elgato video capture with rca/usb connections to the mac, editing in imovie and burning on idvd. The picture quality is awful. What can I do?????

    I am attempting to convert 8mm video cassettes to dvd using a video cassette player, elgato video capture with rca/usb connections to the mac then editing in imovie and burning dvd-r using idvd. The picture quality is awful. What can I do??????

    At what point is the video quality bad?  Is it bad on capture?  I would recommend using an s-video 1394 firewire converter instead.  They capture the video at a higher bit rate.  If you have a lot of 8mm tapes to capture, invest in a stand alone DVD recorder.  They capture and compress in one shot.  If you need to rip it back from the DVD into iMovie again, I would recommend using DVDxDV.

  • I have made a film in imovie and i have moved it into IDVD and now i have it on my desktop. How do i move it on to a blank DVD disk

    i have made a film in imovie and i have moved it into IDVD and now i have it on my desktop. How do i move it on to a blank DVD disk

    What is it doing on the desktop?
    You burn the DVD selecting Burn in iDVD.
    iDVD tutorials:
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    Of course this assumes that you actually have iDVD, as it is no longer included in new Macs running Lion:
    https://discussions.apple.com/docs/DOC-3673

  • I shot a short film with my iPhone via iMovie and I was wondering if there  was any way to finish it on my iPad?

    I shot a short film with my iPhone via iMovie and I was wondering if there  was any way to finish it on my iPad?

    How to move Video into iPad, or transfer project:
    https://discussions.apple.com/thread/3860083?tstart=240
    There is a section in the help manual on transferring projects:
    http://help.apple.com/imovie/iphone/1.3/index.html

  • Input and Publish settings for 8mm film using PreRes422.mov

    I'm using Premiere 12 on Windows 8.  I just got a sample from the company that converted 8mm film to 720HD ProRes422.mov onto a DVD.
    I loaded into Premiere 12 without problem and can see, edit and publish.
    However, what would be the best Input settings?  
    Also, I plan to burn to play on a BluRay player for my HDTV.  What would be the best Publish settings?
    Any other settings or adjustment I should use to improve the image?

    AlanKL
    Good news. That footage is not AVCHD.avi. What you have is MotionJPEG.avi which is usually not good news for Premiere Elements. But, if you can import it in the first place, let us give it a go.
    The video is 1920 x 1080 @ 29.97 frames per second. The GSpot codec program does not tell us if interlaced or progressive. The way to determine that for sure is with the MediaInfo readout.  But, let us try to avoid that with a "try and see" approach.
    1. Open Premiere Elements 12 to its Expert workspace, and import your video into the project with Premiere Elements' Add Media/Files and Folders/Project Assets. From Project
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    AVCHD
    Full HD 1080i30
    And, we have the correct project preset. What does the playback in the Edit area monitor look like?
    If there is an orange line over the Timeline content, we don't have the right project preset. So, close that project, and open a new one.
    2. In the new Premiere Elements 12 project to its Expert workspace, with the File Menu/New/Project route, manually set the project preset for
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    DSLR
    1080p
    DSLR 1080p30@ 29.97
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    have an orange line over its content? If no, then our project preset stays at
    NTSC
    DSLR
    1080p
    DSLR 1080p30@ 29.97
    There will be no colored line over the Timeline content if we have the right project preset. What does the playback in the Edit area monitor look like?
    At this point, please let us know the results, and we will decide what next.
    Thanks.
    ATR

  • 8mm film to video- what do I need to know to transfer properly?

    I'm going to have my dad transfer all of the family 8mm films at a professional transfer place. (8mm, mind you, NOT Super8) to DVD. I'd like to have uncompressed (HD) files so that someday in the future I can put them into imovie. For now, my dad would like them all on DVD.
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    Thanks!
    David from NYC
    p.s. my dad lives near Philly, and I live in NYC....any recommendations for places that do this in one of these cities or their environs?

    I did a project like that earlier this year. [Details here|http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?messageID=11284809&#11284809]
    My recommendation is to capture in HD to a hard drive so you can edit the movies.
    If all you want is unedited movies in SD, a DVD is OK.
    The company I used, MyMovie Transfer.com (aka Debenham Media Group), is in Coraopolis PA, but I did everything by mail.

  • Old 8MM film conversion

    This year I would like to convert all my old 8MM film to DVD format for importing to iMovie for editing.
    Question: Can the Intel iMacs import from DVDs?
    Can anyone provide me with instructions to import from DVDs?
    I've tried importing a movie burned in iDVD back into iMovie, but it's just not obvious to me as to how to do it.
    Thanks

    Hi rjr535
    You will have to convert the DVD's image and audio to MPEG-4 (mp4) befor you can import it to iMovie!
    I use a DVD recorder to burn my old camcorder tapes to DVD's, then pop the DVD's in the iMac and use HandBrake to convert them to MPEG-4 befor importing to iMovie!
    Here is the link for [HandBrake|http://www.versiontracker.com/dyn/moreinfo/macosx/21117]
    Dennis

  • IMovie and iDVD, Stupid Upgrade Questions, Sorry Must Ask

    Okay, the deal is I have a PowerMac G4 Version 2.1 with a Combo Drive. I am upgrading to Mac OSX 3.0 so I can do certain things in iMovie and acquire a better browser. (My constraints on the iMovie project about which I've been inquiring are that at least 40 people have been waiting for copies of it for about a month and wondering why I don't come through with it--I sent a lengthy explanation to the guy who'll be duplicating it in case anyone asks. That's one reason I'm in such a hurry I have to ask urgent questions at forums and newsgroups and don't take the time to read every word ever written on every one of these systems and their various applications, abilities, and uses.)
    I started out thinking I was about one step from having a completed project and the more I learn, the more grim the situation looks. Yet I've done ALL THIS WORK already to create beautiful titles and elaborately-edited outtakes. I HATE to ditch it all if any faint hope flickers into sight!
    My Mac came with the following:
    iMovie 3.0.3 -- which seems to be working fine, only problem is, due to deficiencies in other equipment, I'm having trouble getting my movie to DVD or into any other form where it can be played anywhere outside the Mac!
    iDVD 2.1 -- My feeble brain, inadequate as it may be, has so far gathered the information that to go to DVD, a project can't be played in iMovie and sent straight to a DVD burner (can it?) There has to be some intermediary step. (Right?) People have argued the various merits of iDVD vs. Toast to accomplish this step. I hadn't opened my copy of iDVD because I am in no way near the point of being ready to make a DVD--I have not yet finished editing the project in iMovie. I made the hideous error of ASSUMING that since this came installed in my Mac, it would work fine when needed, just as iMovie did. When I tried to open it just to see what version I had, it wouldn't open and told me this:
    System Requirements
    iDVD 2 requires a PowerMac G4 computer with 256 Megs of RAM, a built-in DVD-R Superdrive and Mac OS 10.1.3 or later.
    Stupid redundant bonus question #1: WHY would this come installed on a Mac which lacks the hardware to use it? (iMovie could still be used to edit, and then copy projects--if I had a digital video camera--which I don't. The only other way we've figured is to send it back through the Canopus ADVC110 converter I used to get the video in there, and play it out to a VCR--a cumbersome process I've been assured will result in crummy quality.)
    Okay, here are the REAL questions:
    1. I don't suppose there's any way the Canopus could be connected to the DVD burner and the information sent to a DVD that way? Just asking.
    2. Obviously the upgrade isn't going to fix things to make iDVD work, as I'm already using Mac OSX 10.2.8, so I would assume its discontent stems from not having the Superdrive--at least, it was complaining something about inadequate hardware and I think that's what it meant. Will connecting a DVD burner via FireWire convince iDVD to work (either automatically or after some sort of tweaking), or am I stuck replacing the drive? I bought a DVD burner the minute I realized my drive was a Combo Drive and not a Superdrive (which is the first time I stuck a blank DVD in it and nothing happened) before learning details about this intermediary step and that there is more than one way to accomplish it.
    3. Is it even worth replacing the Combo Drive with a Superdrive or is it more worth buying a whole new Mac? If I am FORCED to buy a new Mac, what should I do with the old one? (Not only am I ethically opposed to tossing a perfectly good piece of electronic equipment into the ravine, I might get fined for littering. Can a good home be found for it? For that matter it would be a pain as I've saved all sorts of stuff to the Hard Drive which would have to be transferred to the new one before I could get rid of the old one. So can I keep the old one...PLEASE?)
    4. After making the system upgrade, will I be able to bypass iDVD entirely by using Toast, or does Toast also have all sorts of requirements my hardware does not possess so I'll still be SOL, stuck replacing drives or even the whole Mac, or going directly to crummy-quality VHS as there is NO OTHER WAY OUT?
    5. After making the system upgrade, would I be ready for more advanced versions of iMovie and iDVD? Are any upgrades free, or does every improvement cost? Do I get them all at the Apple site, order some of them from some supplier or other the way I did with the Mac OSX upgrade, or what?
    Thanks for helping to clear up my massive confusion!!!

    Wow, thanks. It's good to know iDVD is still an option, even if I don't buy the Superdrive (is that even possible, to get the Combo Drive taken out of my current Mac and a Superdrive put in? There's a question still unanswered.)
    (I think this is good to know--because part of my reasoning in asking the question was to eliminate one option or the other, and now I'm ending up with options of options, but hold on for Part 2 as I do have some questions concerning the capabilities of iDVD and Toast.)
    Partly answering one of my own questions (although I'd appreciate confirmation from someone who actually knows,) if these Toast 7 requirements mean what I think they do, I don't see anywhere that it says the computer MUST have a Superdrive and CAN'T use an external DVD burner!
    Toast 7 Titanium
    Requirements:
    * PowerPC G4 processor or faster (G5 recommended for viewing DivX files on your Mac)
    * PowerPC G3 processor and Mac OS 10.2 users, see Toast 6 Titanium or Popcorn
    * Mac OS X v10.3.9 or later
    * 300 MB of free disk space to install
    * Up to 15 GB of temporary free disk space during usage
    * QuickTime 7 or later
    * CD or DVD burner and recordable media
    If this is true (that I can use an external DVD burner) I like Toast already! My Quicktime Player is only version 6.5.2--is it going to be difficult, expensive, or both, to upgrade that? If it is or the other System Requirements are not met I can just go with Toast 6.
    As far as those requirements, I promise you I don't understand a word of it but here is what my System Profiler says my Mac has. Maybe someone can make sense of it and help me decide which version of Toast to get or, if not, what to do:
    System Profile
    Software Overview:
    | |
    | System version : Mac OS X 10.2.8 (6R73)
    (As I said, I'm upgrading to 10.3.0 soon, and obviously if I want Toast 7 gotta figure out the best way to go to 10.3.9 or higher.)
    | Boot volume : Hard Drive |
    | Kernel version : Darwin Kernel Version 6.8: Wed Sep 10 15:20:55 PDT 2003; root:xnu/xnu-344.49.obj~2/RELEASE_PPC |
    Hardware Overview:
    | |
    | Machine speed : 867 MHz |
    | Bus speed : 133 MHz |
    | Number of processors : 2 |
    | L2 cache size : 256K (times 2) |
    | L3 cache size : 1MB (times 2) |
    | Machine model : Power Mac G4 (version = 2.1) |
    | Boot ROM info : 4.4.6f2
    Memory Overview:
    Location Type Size
    DIMM0/J21 DDR SDRAM 256 MB
    DIMM1/J22 DDR SDRAM 512 MB
    DIMM2/J23 empty
    DIMM3/J20 empty
    Network Overview:
    Built-in:
    | |
    | Flags : 0x8051<Up,PpoinToPoint,Running,Multicast> |
    | Ethernet address : 00.00.00.00.00.00 |
    | IP : 67.0.142.95--> 67.0.128.6 |
    | Subnet Mask : 255.0.0.0 |
    | |
    Devices and Volumes
    PCI:
    SLOT-1(AGP):
    | |
    | Card Type : NVDA,GeForce4MX |
    | Card Name : NVDA,Parent |
    | Card Model : GeForce4 MX |
    | Vendor ID : 10de |
    | Device ID : 172 |
    | ROM# : 1121 |
    | Revision : a5 |
    | |
    USB Information:
    USB Bus 0:
    Apple internal modem:
    | |
    | Product ID : 33282 ($8202) |
    | Vendor : HCF USB V.90 Data/Fax Modem |
    | Device Speed : Full |
    | Power (mA) : 500
    FireWire Information:
    No FireWire devices found.:
    (Unsure why it says this as the Canopus Converter is a FireWire device and it's connected, turned on, and has been working.)
    Bus:
    CD-RW/DVD-ROM:
    | |
    | Disc Burning : Fully supported.
    (Obviously this means CDs only, not DVDs.)
    Hard Drive:
    | |
    | Disk Size : 57.26 GB (1K = 1024) 62 GB (1K = 1000) |
    | Unit Number : 0 |
    | ATA Device Type : ata |
    | Device Serial : VNC303A3L6AAHA |
    | Device Revision : VA3BA52A |
    | Device Model : IBM-IC35L060AVVA07-0 |
    | |
    Hard Drive:
    | |
    | Volume Size : 57.26 GB (1K = 1024) 62 GB (1K = 1000) |
    | Ejectable : No |
    | Writable : Yes
    One thing which may really sway me in favor of Toast is, will it make possible burning 2-hour DVDs? Supposedly iDVD will not enable anything longer than 90 minutes, and when I get to the other big project for which I really want to use the Canopus ADVC 110 converter, that is, converting my home movies from either VHS or 8mm video camera tape to DVD--well, ALL of my tapes are two hours long, because that's the way they come!! I don't see being limited to making 90-minute DVDs as anything but another GIANT PAIN of which I'm already amply supplied! So if Toast will fix this dilemma I'm ALL FOR IT!
    As always, thanks for help and advice.

  • Please help with importing and using imovie and idvd

    Hi,
    Please forgive my lack of knowledge. I previously had a mini dv camcorder that was so easy to use with imovie hd. Now that I have switched to an HD Usb 2.0 camcorder that has built in 16gb memory and memory cards, I have had such a great deal of trouble. I really hope you can help and point me in the right directions.
    Importing movies are fine, but they take so long! Currently, when I import a movie, I set the camcorder to PC mode and import through imovie. But the camcorder stays on, and I'm not sure if this is the best way or healthiest for the camcorder. Do you have a better/faster way to import movies? Is there a way to drag the video from the memory onto the computer, and then from there import the movie? I think at least I wouldn't have to leave the camcorder on.
    Also, one major issue I have is that each movie is broken down into 100 or so clips. I coach basketball, and videotape the games. When there is stoppage, I pause the camcorder. I guess that creates so many clips, so that when the film is imported, there are over 100 clips for the entire movie. Is there a way of making that just 1 entire movie/clip?
    Once I have imported the entire movie, which is 100+ clips, I want to simply create a dvd of the game. I know I have to share it, but do you have a better suggestion as to how I should handle this?
    In the past, all I did was import the mini dv movie into imovie HD, share into idvd, and then that was it, dvd made. This process had become so time consuming.
    Please help!

    Yes, I recognized there would be a slight pause between clips - but after all - you paused the camera at those points.
    Putting them all in sequence in iMovie and then encoding in iDVD will take a lot of time.
    An old favorite saying of mine is "not every job worth doing, is worth doing well'. The meaning being sometimes 95% is good enough so you can go on to the next job.
    How much work do you want to put into each DVD? Can you live with the slight pauses?
    would you suggest using a memory card?
    Yes, but 16GB cards aren't cheap (yet).

  • Keeping iMovie and iDVD versions?

    I am currently editing 4 movies, each of them is 1 hour long. The movies take an enormous amount of space so I am forced to finish one movie, burn it to the DVD, delete it and then continue with the new film.
    Do you normally save both iMovie and iDVD version of your movies?
    If you also save the iMovie version, do you save it in DV tape of in DVD? Which one has longer duration?
    I guess if you do not keep the iMovie version, you need to re-import it if there are any subsequent changes?

    The only thing that has changed is the file extension (now .mov) and the application assigned to open it (QuickTime).
    You can drag it back to the Desktop (best way to view the file in QuickTime Player) or directly into iMovie (to any open Project). You can also open iMovie, start a new Project and "Import" the file.
    Don't forget that these are very large file sizes and import (even though no conversion is needed) may take a few minutes.
    In theory these files are identical to those you may "export" back to camera (tape). No data is lost and no "conversion" to other formats is applied.

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