Tuesday, March 15, 2016

Abstract Video Project: The Reality of Filming and Editing a Video About Spoons

In a social media dominant culture, visual communication is the key to captivating an audience. Video is a great platform when trying to relay an effective message because it is a quick way to relay a message in an entertaining way. Writing and photography may not be as effective because readers simply do not have the time in today’s fast pace environment to read or interpret a message. The failing newspaper industry is a prime example of this. Snapchat, an app that allows you to post 10 second videos and immediately track who has seen your posts. Fortune magazine values Snapchat as a 19 Billion dollar industry. Another example is YouTube, which has 4 Billion views a day.  Both Snapchat and YouTube allows for real time feedback and interaction.  Another crucial benefit to video is that it can invoke series of emotions via storytelling. Videos encompass sight and sound that writing and photography lack.

The biggest struggle in creating a video is finding the message.  There are many elements of an effective message. The first is relaying that message to your audience in a captivating way. To do this, keep your video short and to the point.  Vine is a social media platform that is a great example of short and effective messages. Vines are only 6 seconds long provide a unique way of editing and grabbing the viewers’ attention. The message should relate to your audience in some way whether it is love, sadness or humor. Vine is a great platform for conveying humor. With the individual video project having a run time of 60 seconds, the challenge is how to make the video exciting while still successfully relaying the message. 

The theme assigned to our group video was “abstract”. In attempting to communicate our theme we chose a dream sequence. Spoons replaced everyday objects we may take for granted like a remote or car keys. This separation of a concrete reality to a dream is a message that relates to the audience not only in that everyone dreams but that small objects over time can be come meaningful. There was not a public aspect of the video, we only used group members for our footage with a few minor exceptions like pets and a roommate.

After deciding on a message it is time to shoot footage. A struggle with this is figuring out how much content you need to shoot. While it is always important to have extra footage, too much is also a burden when it comes down to editing. With your message in mind it is important to shoot video that encompasses that message. With the abstract theme in mind, each member of the group had to shoot video that not only was a reflection of our everyday lives but also had to keep in mind how it can be created into one seamless group video. This posed a challenge of shooting footage that defines who you are as a person while thinking in a larger scope under a single theme.

When shooting, reliable and quality video equipment is essential. This video equipment could be in the form of an iPhone. The latest iPhone, iPhone 6 has incredible focus technology and can shoot 1080p video. A video that comes out clean and sharp is visually pleasing to your audience and gives the video a high quality standard. While iPhone produce high quality footage, keeping your video steady and not shaky can be difficult. Another challenge with shooting on an iPhone zooming.  2-5 minutes of footage might mean you need to delete some apps because these videos take up quite a bit of space. Creating a shot is like taking a selfie, angle and lighting are key and practice makes perfect. Certain angles of shots relate different messages to your audience. For example if you are shooting a person at a low angle it can make the subject appear more dominant or powerful.

The next step is editing the footage into a movie. iMovie is an extremely user-friendly editing experience. iMovie encompasses not only filters, transitions, time, themes but also audio editing. It is like having Avid and Pro-Tools combined into one easy and simple movie-making platform. The problem with editing in a group is there are many ways to illustrate the abstract message of a video. Editing requires timing and thinking ahead. Like art, sometimes you don’t know what the finished product is until it is done. It is difficult to explain your vision to other members but they may also have insight you would have never thought of. iMovie does have a dream filter and while it was used for quite a bit of shots it was challenging to find filters that created a dream like feel without being too obvious. Dark filters with a lot of saturation was added to make the audience a little uneasy, as you would feel in a dream. Another feature of IMovie is the ability to speed up or sow down frames. Our group chose to have slow moving frames and to ensure it wouldn’t make the video feel like it was dragging, we added quick cuts of different images. Each shot would only be on the screen for 2-3 seconds but it would be in slow motion. The fastest cuts came at the end with flashes of a single spoon to dozens of boxes of spoons, depicting the adrenalin rush right before waking up from a nightmare or stressful dream.  

Posting the video to YouTube, Vimeo and Vine was easy and simple. Although it was difficult to slim down my video into just six seconds while still keeping the dream sequence message, it still worked. YouTube and Vimeo are similar platforms, although YouTube has been around longer and has a higher viewership.

The experience of working under the abstract theme allowed for a large amount of creativity and through the use of IMovie, the filters and slow motion brought the group’s vision of a dream sequence about spoons to a reality.


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