Converting VHS to editable digital files for iMovie
Can anyone recommend a company that does this type of work well?
Dan
imac and macbook, Mac OS X (10.5.5), iMovie '08
imac and macbook, Mac OS X (10.5.5), iMovie '08
Is DV a miniDV tape or can you save the file in a DV format on a hardrive?
An external, high capacity hard drive would be an excellent medium for transfer
1) If not transferring too many or too many at any one time
2) If the service can/will provide transfers to DV
3) If the service can write the files to an HFS formatted drive (needed for iMovie '08 to read them)
Some companies offer creating AVI files. Can these be read into iMovie or will these files also have the issue of too many cycles of compression and de-compression?
AVI is a file container used to contain "interleaved" audio content -- a of spatially maintaining synchronization between the audio and video content. QT, on the other hand, is a temporal media structure which synchronizes all content (audio, video, text, chapter tracks, text tracks, "Tween" tracks, etc.) are synchronized by an external clock reference. While the AVI file container is itself still supported by QT (even though its originator, Microsoft, dropped official support a decade ago), the codecs used to compress the audio and video content may not be supported. For instance, one of the current, more popular compression combinations is DivX/MP3. DivX is a proprietary, third-party video codec and MP3 audio is only supported by certain QT-based applications. Since iMovie '08 cannot access any third-party QT components, this file would have to be converted to one of the iMovie '08 "edit" compatible compression formats -- DV, AIC, Motion-JPEG, Photo-JPEG, and/or supported MPEG-4 or H.264 profiles with supported audio compression formats. So if you have a service create an AVI file that is not audio AND video supported, you will end up having to re-compress every one of you files to a supported format. You could, of course, switch to iMovie HD and, if the AVI audio/video combination is "conversion" compatible with QT (a lower requirement than being "edit compatible), then iMovie HD would automatically convert the AVI files as part of the import process. (I.e., if your open/create an iMovie HD DV project, then the files would be converted to DV. If an MPEG-4 iMovie HD project, then MPEG4/AAC.) Either method, as you noted, requires one extra cycle of re-compression before the content even gets into the editor for editing.
IMovie v5 and 6 are designated iMovie HD and are based on tradition "timeline" editing of content. They are also compatible with third-party plug-ins which add special effects and filter options, as well as, internal chaptering, lower CPU requirements for use, and direct linking to iDVD for burning of DVDs. As an iLife '08 owner, you are entitled to a free download of iMovie HD v6.0.4 if you want it. Most User use bother applications depending on what the objectives of their project are. As indicated previously, this version will also convert non-editable compression formats to edit compatible formats as part of the import process if you have the proper QT components installed. Many users who cant or won't perform manual conversions for iMovie '08 use the older versions for this reason.
Is is a previous version of iMovie?
It is an older version but edits in a totally different manner. I.e., they are totally different applications that simply share a common name.
If so, will I have to but it and install it?
Program is free. Just press the link included above. Application will install in a Folder named "iMovie (previous version)" and both can be installed on your system at the same time.
Do you think that would be a better option than having them convert the AVI file to the H.264 format?
You would have to decide that for yourself. I do believe it is a good idea to have both available. Each has its own strengths and weaknesses. I use both, as well as, FCE, and FCP, depending on the type and depth of editing require for a particular project. For that matter, I also use QT Pro for many "quickie" edits not requiring a "full-blown" video editor.
Converting VHS to editable digital files for iMovie