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Tag Archives: Post-production
304 articles found
FCP Editors: Time to Add Avid to Your Edit Mix?
Regardless of what you think about the soon-to-be-released Final Cut Pro X, if you’re a Final Cut user, there are still some things you’d like to do faster or better with your current setup. Need to share project files across …
Useful Tools for Editors: Pro Media Tools
Back in August of 2009, Digital Rebellion released a really useful tool for Final Cut Pro editors called FCS Maintenance Pack. That thing has probably saved quite a lot of headaches since its inception. Just in the last couple of …
As NAB Nears, Lots of Useful Tools Get Updated
This is not a blog post about fixing what ails Final Cut Pro. It’s about useful tools for FCP! Here’s a quick round-up of the previously featured Useful Tools that have gotten recent updates prior to NAB: Digital Heaven’s Final Print, …
A Discussion on Tape, Tapeless and Shooting Ratios
There’s a great post over at the blog Little Frog in Hi Def prompting a discussion that needs to be had, about an issue that everyone in post-production is surely experiencing right now. As film and tape have given way to …
Video diversion Gary Hecker: Master Foley artist at work
SoundWorks Collection: Gary Hecker – Veteran Foley Artist from Michael Coleman on Vimeo. Here’s a nice little video diversion for the movie fans out there on Oscar weekend. It’s a video profile of veteran and award-winning Foley artist Gary Hecker …
Sony’s New OLEDs Really Do Outshine CRT
Today, in a dark room somewhere inside the Sony building in midtown Manhattan, I saw the future — finally, Sony is poised to release a new line of OLED monitors that seem set to surpass old-school CRTs as reference monitors for …
Beware of (Some) YouTube FCP Tutorial Videos
A couple of weeks ago I came across a YouTube Final Cut Pro tutorial about how to edit a music video. It popped up in my RSS feed, as the “tutorial” was embedded on a website. As one who often …
Avid Upgrades Media Composer Yet Again, to v. 5.5
When talking software I think of new versions in two ways: updates and upgrades. Updates are more like the smaller “dot” releases that take a piece of software from version 2.0 to 2.0.1 or 2.1. Then there’s upgrades that move …