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Newsletter Archive
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March 2005 |
Helping YOU preserve your precious family stories on video. |
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Now that winter is nearly over, it's time to spring
into action on your family history video project!
Family Legacy Video is ready to help.
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Welcome
to the March issue!
I hope you enjoy this issue of the Family Legacy Video™ Producer's e-Newsletter.
As always, please e-mail me at
steve@familylegacyvideo.com or phone me toll-free (1.888.662.1294) with
any questions or comments you have.
Cheers! - - Steve Pender
Find past newsletters on the Family Legacy Video
newsletter
archive page.
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Music 'n' Memories DVD™
- Save $50 until March 15 |
We've extended the introductory sale of the Music 'n'
Memories DVD!
The Music 'n' Memories DVD™ is the newest addition to Family
Legacy Video's menu of video production services. It's a low-cost,
professionally edited DVD (or VHS video) featuring your photos set to your
choice of music from the renowned Omni music collection.
The Music 'n' Memories DVD™ is a great way to celebrate the
special people and times of your life and is perfect for celebrations ranging
from anniversaries to birthdays, Mother's Day and Father's Day, quinceaneras,
reunions, retirements, Valentine's Day, etc.
The DVD is easy to order. Just send us your photos (or photo
files) and tell us your choice of music (you can scan the music library via the Internet and make
your own choice or let us decide on the music selection for you). Family Legacy Video does the rest. The basic DVD includes up to 30 of your photos set to one piece
of music, opening and closing titles and a custom-printed DVD.
A full-length sample is
currently playing in the Family Legacy Video Theatre.
Click
here to reach the theatre.
Order by March 15, 2005 and take advantage of a special
introductory price of $295. That's $50 off the basic rate of $345.
For all the details, visit the Music
'n' Memories DVD™ page.
Table of
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Family
Legacy Video workshop deadline is almost here |
If you live in the Tucson area, you won't want
to miss Family Legacy Video's
new, six-session workshop called "Produce your own family history videos." As
the title says, workshop attendees will learn professional tips, tricks and
techniques for planning, taping and editing their own family history videos -
and actually work on their own family videos throughout the three-month course.
The first session is scheduled for Saturday,
March 12. The deadline for purchasing reservations is Thursday, March 10.
The cost for the workshop is $325. Additional members of a family production
team can attend for half-price, or $162.50. At least one person in a family
group must purchase a copy of the Family Legacy Video Producer's Guide™. Since
professionally produced family history videos can cost thousands of dollars,
this workshop is definitely a bargain!
The workshop takes place at the Scottish Rite
Annex in downtown Tucson, at
33 Ochoa Street. 33 Ochoa St. is south of Broadway, between Scott and Stone
Avenues, just east of St. Augustine Cathedral. Street parking on Saturday is
free and plentiful. The Saturday sessions run from 9 AM to
11:30 AM.
Visit the Workshop page for complete details,
including session descriptions and ordering information. Attendance is limited
to twenty, so be sure to reserve and pay early.
Table of
contents
By Bob Brooke
According to the American Heritage Dictionary of the English
Language, archaeology is "the systematic recovery and scientific study of
material evidence of human life and culture in past ages." Most see an
archaeologist as someone wearing khakis and an Indiana Jones-style hat, who's up
to his or her elbows in fossils and shards.
Sure, archaeologists dig up and study bits and pieces of the
past to help reconstruct life in the past. And while rifling around a dusty attic
or basement may not be as romantic as finding a 4,000-year-old pottery shard,
it nevertheless can yield some interesting finds. It's amazing what can be
found in old trunks and shoeboxes. A family history amounts to more than mere
vital statistics. While many searchers compile lists of names, birth, marriage
and death dates, they often miss the most important part--who were these people?
Letters, diaries, personal journals, memoirs, photo albums,
clothing and other family artifacts can add flesh and blood to the ancestral
bones and show these peoples' personalities. Mothers, especially, are great
savers. Beginning with keeping a baby book, they tend to amass an entire
childhood history of their offspring. When her son is part of the team that won
the state basketball championship, she cut out newspaper clippings telling of
it. When her daughter got married, she clipped the newspaper engagement and
wedding announcements. When her husband went off to war, she saved the letters
he sent.
Thanks to Eastman Kodak, even ordinary families kept a record
of their lives through photographs. While the appearance of the photo albums has
changed considerably--from black and white snapshots to videotapes--the purpose
remains the same: to make a visual record of family events. Often, scrapbooks
contained not only photographs but recipes, souvenirs, postcards, ticket stubs
and such.
Old letters between friends, acquaintances and lovers can
reveal the innermost secrets of their lives. Letter writing was the main means
of communication until the mid-20th century. Before the days of television and
the Internet, people sat down and wrote long, detailed letters containing news
from home to faraway family members. A letter filled with details of widely
scattered relatives helps to trace generations, especially when localities are
mentioned.
Letters also may suggest relationships that aren't easily
determined otherwise. And the date or year of a given letter may supply a
valuable point of reference for an event which isn't recorded elsewhere. When
perusing old letters, look not only at their contents but also take note of
postmarks, dates and return addresses.
Diaries and personal journals didn't just contain the immature
line-a-day ramblings of teenage girls; they were also adult depositories for thoughts
and reactions to events. Their authors filled them with personal expressions and
reactions to life and events that helps attach a personality to their name. It's
essential to record any names found in a diary, since they may come into play
later.
Also, don't take it for granted that attics and basements are
the only places relatives kept treasured documents. Letters were often stuffed
within the pages of a favorite book, while personal diaries and letter
collections were often hidden in secret places in walls or floors.
As in archaeology, the people who could have answered your
family history questions are long gone. But their thoughts remain to be
uncovered.
Learn more about Bob Brooke by visiting his Web site:
http://www.bobbrooke.com.
Table of
contents
| Preparing your family history
interview: The preinterview |
A successful family legacy video interview hinges on several
things, one of which is a well-crafted set of questions. Drafting questions can be
a daunting prospect, but there is a tried and true professional technique
that'll make the effort as easy as pie.
It's called the preinterview. Quite simply, a preinterview is
the interview before the interview. Consider it a fact-finding mission, or the
interviewer's version of exploratory surgery. All you need is a couple of hours
with your interview subject, a notepad and pen or pencil, or an audio recorder.
The aim is to conduct a casual conversation, taking notes along the way. As you
ask your subject questions about his/her life (for help with this, download the
free article, "What to ask during your family interview: 40 questions to get you
started!" from the Family Legacy Video Web site) you'll uncover lots of details,
some expected and some not. Your subject will also most likely remember stories
and facts he/she hasn't thought about in years - and will want those included
in the final interview.
Then, all you need to do is review your notes and design your
questions to bring out the details you uncovered during the preinterview.
Another benefit of this technique is that you'll know what stories your subject
plans to tell during the video interview. In case your subject forgets something, you'll be able to prompt
him/her for those special details.
So consider including a preinterview as part of your family
history interview preparations. It'll make for a better interview and make you a
better interviewer. Plus, it's fun!
Table of
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Enjoy
the show at the Family Legacy Video Theatre |
The Family
Legacy Video Theatre is the online theatre where you
can view all the video clips streaming from the Family Legacy Video Web site.
The clips you see there will surely inspire you with ideas for your family
video, plus you'll get to see Steve Pender talk about his passion for family
history video in two television appearances.
Here's how you reach the theatre:
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First,
click
here.
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This opens the
FLV Theatre welcome screen.-
Click on the "Click Here to Enter" link.
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You'll see a window containing a video screen with controls and a list of clips.
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Decide which clip you'd like to view and click on the correct speed (High, Mid,
Low) to match your Internet connection. In the bottom right of the theatre
window is a list showing the appropriate speed for your kind of
connection.
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Enjoy the clip!
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Select another clip or close the theatre window.
The Family Legacy Video Theatre is always open & YOU decide when the show begins.
Table of
contents
| Oops,
time to correct a
couple of mistakes |
Mistake # 1: The February newsletter incorrectly stated that the article, "A
resolution to preserve your family stories on video," would run this month. This
article was actually included in the January newsletter.
Mistake # 2: The January newsletter featured instructions for creating a
computer desktop shortcut to the Family Legacy Video ™
Producer's Guide disc (in case the disc's auto start feature doesn't work on
your computer). The instructions weren't entirely accurate. The correct
procedure is below.
Insert the
Family Legacy Video™
Producer's Guide into your CD drive.
Right click on the Start button at the bottom left of your screen.
A drop down menu opens.
Click on Explore.
Scroll down the folders list to the drive labeled FLV Guide.
Double click on the drive.
You'll see a listing of the folders and files on the disc.
Right click on the file labeled INDEX.HTM (or INDEX).
A drop down menu opens.
Click on Create Shortcut.
A message window opens. It says, "Windows cannot create a shortcut here.
Do you want the shortcut to be placed on the desktop instead?"
Click on Yes.
A picture labeled "Shortcut to INDEX.HTM" appears on your desktop.
Close the FLV Guide window.
If you don't want to create a shortcut, just double click
on the INDEX.HTM file to start the disc.
Table of
contents
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Ask
Steve - This month: Making the right impression - on your DVD, that is |
Q:
I'd like to make my family DVDs look as professional as possible. Would you
recommend some labeling software?
- - Mark G.,
Califon, New Jersey
A:
Mark, giving the face of your DVD a professional look has never been easier.
That's because imprintable DVDs are now on the market. The face of an
imprintable DVD is actually a blank, inkjet-compatible surface. The catch is
you'll need a printer designed to print on the disc. Epson has a new line of
printers, its "R" series, that fits the bill. I've personally used the R200
(retailing for approximately $100) and I am very pleased with the results. Don't
fret if you're not an artist; Epson includes easy-to-use label design software
with the printer.
Got a
question about any aspect of family history video production?
Send it to Steve at
steve@familylegacyvideo.com.
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Copyright 2005, Family Legacy Video, Inc. All rights reserved.
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