Helping YOU preserve your precious family stories on video.
This year, create a family legacy holiday video
you'll enjoy for generations to come. See story below.
Welcome
to the December issue!
2009 - what a year it's been. Our economy has challenged most
of us, to say the least. But these stressful times have also reinforced for me
the importance of family in providing the comfort and support we need to weather
this stormy financial climate. I also find the preservation and celebration of
family stories as relevant as ever. After all, preceding generations were
buffeted by ill winds as well. The stories of their successes in dealing with
life's struggles can bring direction and hope to us - their children,
grandchildren and great-grandchildren. I say "can bring" because before those
stories can inspire anyone, they need to be captured on video and presented in
ways that can entertain and inspire your family. Helping you do that, through
custom video production services as well as do-it-yourself guides and Webinars
is what Family Legacy Video is all about - please do let me know how we can help
you during the coming year.
In the meantime, I wish you and yours a Merry Christmas and a
Happy Chanukah, Kwanzaa and Solstice. See you on the "flip side" in 2010.
I hope you enjoy this issue of the Family Legacy Video™
Producer's e-Newsletter. Please e-mail me at
steve@familylegacyvideo.com or phone
toll-free (1.888.662.1294) with any
questions or comments you have. Visit Family Legacy Video on the Web at:
www.familylegacyvideo.com.
"Video Biography Basics" Webinar - registration
deadline: December 31.
December 31. It's the last day of the year, of course. And this year it's
also the last day you can register for Family Legacy Video's first Webinar
series for 2010.
"Video Biography Basics," a six-session
Webinar series led by award-winning video biographer and Family Legacy Video
president Steve Pender begins on January 19, 2010. If you've been wondering what it takes to create a
legacy video, this series will answer your questions and give you practical and
professional tips and techniques you can apply to your own do-it-yourself video
biography projects. The sessions are designed for beginners and advanced
beginners.
Choose from morning or evening sessions. The dates: January 19, 26; February 2,
9, 16, 23. Individual sessions cost $40; sign up for the series and save 10%.
The picture above shows my mom, my brother Mike, my dad and
me celebrating Christmas in our new home in 1959. It was the first of many
Christmases in that home, and the first of many Christmas photos to come. As
grateful as I am for the photos, I often think how wonderful it would be if we'd had
video back then to document those special days. We didn't, of course, but today
we have the technology we need to capture the sights and sounds that fill our
holiday halls.
Of course, just capturing scenes with no thought as to how
you'll use them later can lead to a pretty uninteresting program. So this month
we're reprinting an article from last December's e-Newsletter that offers tips
for approaching your holiday video shoot in a creative way - one that will lead
to a holiday video your family will relish for years to come.
- - Steve Pender
Start wide.
A standard video technique is to start every scene out with a "master" shot.
Simply put, this means first recording the entire scene as a wide shot. If
you're taping a party or a dinner, for example, set up your camera so you
have a view of the entire room and everyone in it. Then start recording. If the
camera is in a secure enough place you can even walk away from it for a couple
of minutes so you don't call attention to the fact that you're taping. Set the
camera on a bookcase, or on top of a TV, anything that gives you a panoramic
view of the room or area. Even a tripod in the corner of the room can work;
while people may notice it at first, they'll get used to it and ignore it after
a while.
Let people
be themselves. Walking up to people, sticking a camera in their faces and
telling them to act naturally is a sure-fire way to suck the spontaneity out of
any shot. If you know your subjects are a bit skittish around cameras, hang back
a little bit and use your camera's zoom control to get that closer view instead
of thrusting the camera into the middle of things. On the other hand, if your
subjects are comfortable around you and your camera, don't be afraid to move in
close. You can even engage them in conversation if it suits you.
Don't be
afraid to direct. While you want to intrude as little as possible on a family
scene, there may be times when a little direction is called for. Maybe you have
an idea for an opening for your video - let's say you want to show a long line
of relatives, arms filled with presents, filing in through the front door. Don't
be afraid to tell everyone what you want them to do and enlist their
cooperation. Set up your camera, place everyone where you want them to be, tell
them what they need to do and where they should go after they do it. Then cross
your fingers, press the record button and yell "action!" Remember to have fun
and also accept the fact
that you're not working with professional actors. Be happy with what you get on
one or, at the most, two tries.
Look for
special moments. In every family gathering there are countless small, precious
moments that help tell the story of your family. Maybe it's a grandmother
reading to her first grandchild, or a group chatting and cooking in the kitchen,
or your cousins hanging holiday lights on the porch. Keep your camera close by.
When you see moments like these, don't hesitate to capture them on tape. An
added plus is that when people are having fun and are truly engrossed in what
they're doing, they're less likely to notice you and your camera (and if they do
notice they'll be less likely to care that you're taping). Case in point: Years
ago I was hired to shoot a profile of an insurance salesman. He was a wonderful,
elderly gentleman. We spent a day with him and his family and, as my crew was
packing up, I saw the salesman's granddaughter sit down at the family piano and
begin to practice. I quickly asked the salesman to join his granddaughter at the
keyboard and hustled my cameraman over to the scene. The result was a lovely
moment with grandpa and granddaughter enjoying some private time - totally
oblivious to the camera.
Vary your
shots. Shoot your subjects and action from below, above, straight on, from
behind and in profile. Change your focal lengths from shot to shot, moving from
close to wide. The more variety you have in the way you frame your shots, the
more visually interesting your finished video will be. You can use the flip out
monitor on your camera as a view finder to help you get those ultra high or
ultra low shots you wouldn't be able to get if you just relied on your camera's
eyepiece.
Have fun.
Enjoy yourself. Relax. Laugh. If your family sees you, the
cameraperson/director, having a good time, the more likely they are to relax and
join in the video fun with you.
PS - Don't
forget to stock up on tape (or data cards) - and keep your batteries charged!
Family Legacy Video is proud of the premium video biographies
we create for our clients. In order to highlight the quality of our work and to
demonstrate the possibilities for you, we've posted samples from a variety of
our custom legacy videos online in the Family Legacy Video Theatre™.
How do you visit the Family Legacy Video Theatre™?
Simply go directly to the Sample Clips page
of our Web site. There you'll find a video player,
consisting of a monitor with playback controls and a list of available clips.
Here's how it works:
Click the large red arrow in the monitor. Clips will play in order from
the top of the list.
OR - click on the individual titles below the monitor to play the clips in any
order you like.
Raise and lower the sound using the slider control (short red bar) below the
monitor on the right.
To the right of the audio bar is what looks like a little square surrounded by
arrows. Click on this to expand the video to full screen.
Enjoy the show and please let us know what you think of the new video player!
Remember, the Family Legacy Video
Theatre™
is always open, and YOU decide when the show begins.
Q: Dear Steve,
I came across your blog on
a Google search for info on XLR inputs. I very much appreciated the links and
suggestions in your post on audio adapters. Thanks! Please would you be willing
to tell me what kind of camcorder you used on the video interview you have
posted on your homepage? And what kind of lighting did it require?
- - Susan R.
A: Hi, Susan.
I’m glad you found my info useful. I’ve been using Sony’s HVR-Z1U or equivalent
camcorders. As for lighting, we start with three-point lighting and then build
on it by adding additional background lights. You might check
www.videomaker.com for camcorder
reviews. I recommend you stick with Sony, Canon or Panasonic cameras - and buy the camera
that has the most features in your particular price range. I still work with
tapes but many of today’s camera manufacturers are going tapeless, so be sure
that your computer and software are compatible with your camera format. Good
luck!
Cheers, Steve
Got a question about any aspect of family
history video production?
Send it to Steve at
steve@familylegacyvideo.com.