Video is the wave of the future - and here's
how your church can inexpensively get in
on the action.
Since YouTube and other
video sites have
exploded over the past
few years I've wanted
to try recording some videos
for WorshipIdeas
(if you've noticed I've
put several up in
the past few weeks.) Even
in the past few
months I've noticed more
and more video clips
turning up in Google search
results and on
news websites.
I started my research in
late August. It
seems there are two extremes
in HD video
records: $200 and under
(inexpensive) and
$800 and over (expensive.)
Since I just wanted
to dabble in video (and
didn't know if I'd
even like it) I wanted
to go cheap.
The little Flip cameras
are popular, but
I tend to shy away from
the popular as experience
has taught me there's probably
something
out there not as well known
but twice as
good.
I learned that a key to
great video is to
have an external microphone
for the best
sound quality. Internal
mics produce crummy
sound with lots of room
noise. Unfortunately
all the mini, cheap HD
video cameras have
only internal mics - except
one!
The newly released Kodak Zi8
is the only
mini HD video camera with
an external microphone
jack. I overnighted it
and started playing
with it.
Most of the new WorshipIdeas videos (except
for the Kristian Stanfill video) were created
on the Zi8. And unbelievably, my latest clip
of the Jamestown church was aired yesterday
on CBN News!! Let me restate that: a cable news channel
just broadcast my clip made from a $180 video
camera!! Here's the clip:
The possibilities are endless
for a church
- man on the street interviews,
skits, website
greetings, sermon illustrations...
great,
clear and crisp Hi-Def
video at an affordable
price.
The Kodak Zi8 is not hassle free. If you want to shoot videos of your cat
dancing and upload them directly from the
camera to YouTube, you'll have no problem.
If you want to edit video (on a PC,) you'll
have problems.
I spent an entire day bashing my head against
the wall trying to figure out how to get
video out of the Kodak into my editing software.
Here's the problem: the video shot is proprietary - it's in a modified QuickTime MOV format.
But even though I installed QuickTime I still
couldn't get the video to work in my Sony Vegas
video editing software. The included
MediaImpressions software has a lousy editing
feature that makes Windows Movie Maker look
high-end. So here are the hoops I jump through
to make great videos and edit them with the
Kodak Zi8:
Buy memory. The Zi8 needs
a memory card,
purchased separately. I
got a 16 gig SDHC
card and have nowhere near
filled it up yet.
Shoot video in 720p (the camera will shoot in 1080p but will
not export in an editable form for Sony Vegas.)
Buy a "steadicam." This is a contraption pros attach to their
cameras to make the image steady so they
can walk around and get action shots. Even
though the Zi8 has image stabilization built
in, you really need a steadicam if you're
going to move with the camera and want smooth
and professional footage. I bought an amateur
steadicam that works wonderfully - the Manfrotto ModoSteady is $99 and props the camera up against my
chest for a very steady shot. Notice how
I pan across the church in my video - that's
using the ModoSteady.
Once you have shot your
video, plug the Zi8
into your computer's USB
slot and copy files
to your hard drive. The
first time you plug
your camera into your computer
it will ask
you to install the proprietary
software.
Convert to MP4. The camera's videos are in the QuickTime
MOV format. Even though I installed QuickTime
the videos would play but without sound in
Sony Vegas. Launch the MediaImpressions software
you've installed from the camera and use
it to open your videos (browse videos.) Select
the videos you want to edit, then click "Media
Converter" at the bottom of the screen.
Convert settings: Manufacturer=Sony, Select
Device Model= Sony PS3, click the edit button,
resolution=1280x720, Audio Bitrate=128bps.
The software will convert the MOV files into
MP4 files.
Convert to AVI. Now that the videos are MP4, Vegas will
play sound but not play
video! So I found
a weird little program,
probably coded by
some kid in his dorm room,
that will strip
something or other out
of the file and turn
it into an AVI file. Download
MP4Cam2AVI
Easy Converter here: http://sourceforge.net/projects/mp4cam2avi/
Now, finally, the video is ready to edit! Sony Vegas works much like Sonar in that
you have different tracks to play with -
video, audio, music, etc. I create a little
bumper graphic, pick the videos I want, fade
them in and out, add some compression and
EQ to the voice to make it stand out, and
throw in a little background music.
If you want to upload your edited video to
YouTube, that's yet another step. A YouTube help page offers rendering suggestions
(I render to MP4) and a Google search for
"Sony Vegas YouTube" found several
settings. I tried a few - one setting rendered
fine but when I uploaded the clip to YouTube
the sound was out of sync. I tried another
and it worked fine.
Whew! If somebody ever
figures out how to
easily shoot video, edit
it and upload it
without the hassle of codecs
and converting,
they'll be rich.
Bottom Line: The Kodak Zi8 has opened up the world of video to me.
Did I mention that within a month of shooting
my first video I had a clip on a cable news
network? It's an affordable HD video camera
with knockout, broadcast-quality video at
a rock-bottom price. It's the only mini HD
recorder with an external microphone jack.
PC users will have to jump through hoops
to edit videos, Mac users may not have as
many issues.