Tuesday, November 02, 2010

Shooting and publishing videos from your iPhone 4

We've been shooting most of the videos for the blog using a Sony video camera at the gym.  It's ideal to use since you can zoom and it is probably more steady, especially if you have a tripod. But a lot of us have an iPhone 4 with us almost all the time that do a fine job of shooting nice video.

The quick and dirty method

  1. Create a youtube account if you don’t already have one.
  2. film the video (landscape orientation is preferable )
  3. Go to your camera roll. press the square button with the arrow,

  1. Tap the movie and press the “Share” button and select “Send to YouTube”

   

This should work for most movies, especially if you narrate anything you want the viewer to know about.  But sometimes you want to add some title screens with text, audio, or some nice transitions. 

How to make your movie a little prettier

1.    Get iMovie from the app store ($4.99)

2.    Save the image and movie from this email to your phone if you are filming for CrossFit Initiative. Otherwise, find some images or clips of your logo (or whatever) that you want to use to dress up your movie and save them to your phone.

3.    Film your movie.

Create your project in iMovie

·         Go to iMovie and create a new project.

·         Set the Theme. You’ll have the option to set this when your project opens. If you want to change it later, touch the sprocket icon at the beginning of the timeline.

     

·         Add a title screen - If you want to start the movie with a Title screen where you can enter text, you need to add a movie. That is what the attached movie is for.  You could just apply the title screen to your whole movie, but that is probably not what you want. So add a short clip like the one attached.

Creating a title screen from an image

1.    Create a new project and add an image.

2.    Set the duration.  You’ll want it to be long enough to allow for the title to be read. Probably around 3-10 seconds. Set the duration by dragging the end of the clip when it is selected (has a yellow border)

3.    Optional: Animate it

a.    go to the beginning of the clip, set the position by using your finger to move the image, then go to the end of the clip and set the position again. Now it will animate between the two positions you set.

4.    Optional: Add audio

5.    Export the movie. I film in high quality so I export this movie in high quality.

6.    Create a new project and add the new movie to the project.

7.    Double tap the clip in the timeline. Set the Title style. Which one you use will depend on the Theme you choose. Touch the text area on the clip to edit it.

        

Adding your movie(s)

·         Tap the “add content” button and select your movie. If you want to trim it, touch it and then drag the yellow handles on either end. If you have lots of cutting and trimming to do, you’ll be better off just uploading it to a computer and editing it there as trimming on the iphone is pretty imprecise and takes a long time to do.

·         Optional: set the transition type

o   Double click the transition square between clips. You’ll get a menu allowing you to choose what type of transition you like. Default is cross dissolve.

·         Optional: add audio

o   You can add audio, but it is only applied to the entire project.  If you want to apply audio to just certain clips, the workaround is to create a separate project for that clip, add the audio, and export that project. Now, when you add that clip into your project, it will have the audio you want without having to apply audio to the entire project

·         Add a closing title screen. Do this the same way you created the intro title screen.

Publish

·         Go to the Projects page and tap the share button

·         Choose your export size. This will save it to your camera roll

·         Preview your video and if everything looks good, select it and share it on YouTube.

The first time you do this, it might take a while. But once you have a project set up with intro and title clips you like, sprucing up movies should be pretty quick. Get creative! I can’t wait to see what interesting things you’ll shoot. If you’re looking for ideas, give the 2-minute Double under challenge a shot.

Ray and Rob doing Double Unders - An example of a video that I filmed, edited, and published all from my phone. I don’t think it’s going to win any Grammys but it might win a Dummy.

Download now or watch on posterous
IMG_0536.MOV (762 KB)

No comments: