
Most cameras will have a built-in microphone and when you record video the audio automatically records and syncs to that clip - which means you don’t need to do anything but copy that footage from your SD card to your machine and start editing! However, the built-in mics in most cameras are atrocious! For anyone looking to get clean usable audio that will not make your audience storm out of the room punching a drywall, you’ll need to use an external microphone. If you’re new to filmmaking or videography then you might be asking yourself, doesn’t the audio from my recording automatically sync to my video? Why on earth would I need to do this manually? Very good questions, if we do say so ourselves. There are a couple of different ways video editors can sync their audio to their video and we’ll be explaining them both in this article. So, how do you prevent this from happening? The simple answer is by synching up your audio to your video. But if your audio just simply doesn’t match up to your video, then you’ll be eternally doomed (or get really bad feedback from your audience). They’ll have a harder time forgiving bad audio. So I could be wrong here.An audience can forgive bad video.

I wouldn't necessarily recommend the new version - but at the same time I was in a huge rush for a job, and I didn't really have time to tinker with it either. Neither is a huge deal, but when you're in a rush, an extra 15 minutes is annoying. So I ended up with like 20 tracks (again, I didn't import all those subfolders at once) that I needed to move to 4 tracks in Premiere - or manually move all the files from the subfolders to a single folder for each camera. So if your raw files have multiple folders within their folders (For instance, my raw files had about 20 folders per camera), it creates a new track for all 20 of those little subfolders. That sounds great until you realize that A) it takes like 2 seconds to do it manually, and B) it reads your computers folders as tracks. One thing I found annoying is that you can't import your files manually into tracks (or devices) any more - it does it automatically. The interface looks nicer, but I think the 3.5 works a bit better. I found it to be just as slow to import those files into 4 as I did 3.5. I had to ingest about 12 hours of footage into (I did it into multiple projects) that I didn't have time to transcode. My hope was that it would be able to handle MXF files better (I can't remember the camera). I picked up 4 a few weeks ago in a rush for a job. Looking for something more local? Here are some localized subreddits: To chat with specialists in recording sound on set, check out Want to learn more? Try these subreddits: You don't want people to rip off your work, we shouldn't be ripping off theirs. Sunday Sunday Job/Career Advice ( for the past month) Are you new to editing?ĭiscussion or advocacy of piracy is prohibited. Thursday Tip Thursday ( for the past month) Wednesday Assistant Editor Wednesdays ( for the past month) Monday: Megathread Mondays [ for the past month)
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No posting of your services, or that you're looking for work.This is a subreddit for people who make their living in the field (or are trying to.) If you want to know what software to use.go to /r/VideoEditing.Then be specific about the type of feedback you want. Feedback: do it somewhere other than facebook or YouTube.Imagine someone else is having a bad day. Generally we're not a place for you to advertise your work, and we expect everyone to be civil and generally not act like a jerk. For people that get paid to edit film, video, television, etc.
