Creating a 'holiday' video with music in the background
Creating a 'holiday' video with music in the background
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Discussion

Leicesterdave

Original Poster:

2,288 posts

204 months

Friday 10th April 2015
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on youtube? Can anyone give me an idea on doing this?

Studio117

4,250 posts

215 months

Friday 10th April 2015
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Don't, they are usually god awful.

minky monkey

1,564 posts

190 months

Friday 10th April 2015
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Post the original video up here, I'm sure someone will edit it for you....


Mwahahaha......


Have you tried MS Movie Maker, I've used it for a few small bits and pieces.




Butter Face

34,049 posts

184 months

Friday 10th April 2015
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iMovie on your iPad or iPhone is what you want to use.

J.R.B.

329 posts

216 months

Friday 10th April 2015
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Studio117 said:
Don't, they are usually god awful.
This.

Leicesterdave

Original Poster:

2,288 posts

204 months

Friday 10th April 2015
quotequote all
Studio117 said:
Don't, they are usually god awful.
how so?

Studio117

4,250 posts

215 months

Friday 10th April 2015
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Porn with music > ste
Car videos with music > terrible
Holiday slideshow with elton john or fatboy slim dubbed over > God awful

marshalla

15,902 posts

225 months

Friday 10th April 2015
quotequote all
Studio117 said:
Porn with music > ste
Car videos with music > terrible
Holiday slideshow with elton john or fatboy slim dubbed over > God awful
The good news is that Youtube will probably kill the music anyway unless you can prove you have permission to use it.

Triumph Man

9,464 posts

192 months

Friday 10th April 2015
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Studio117 said:
Porn with music > ste
Car videos with music > terrible
Holiday slideshow with elton john or fatboy slim dubbed over > God awful
Yeah nothing worse than watching a car video and the oik behind the wheel turns up some stupid music.

Boydie88

3,283 posts

173 months

Friday 10th April 2015
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I used movie maker to put together photos and videos from an East coast Australian Contiki trip. Although You Tube will detect the music you used and ban it from countries which the tracks are restricted in... In my case it was Australia and Germany.

anonymous-user

78 months

Saturday 11th April 2015
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J.R.B. said:
Studio117 said:
Don't, they are usually god awful.
This.
+1

Holiday videos are almost always terrible... Quite simply because no one wants to watch a video of your holiday. Not even the people who were present on the holiday.

I will never forget sitting though about an hour of footage of some relatives holiday to Florida... It was 15 years ago and I still have nightmares!

But if you want to add music to a video and even do a bit of light editing then I recommend iMovie on the iPhone, iPad and Mac. Very easy to use and works well.

Starfighter

5,307 posts

202 months

Sunday 12th April 2015
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Proshow Gold - I used this for the Le Mans and Spa tours a couple of years back for he guys I went with.

jinkster

2,412 posts

180 months

Sunday 12th April 2015
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Apple iMovie

durbster

11,823 posts

246 months

Monday 13th April 2015
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Personally, I love seeing places my friends and family have been and what they got up to. I'm aware I'm in a minority but don't be put off by the cynicism here. Have a go.

It is true that most holiday videos are boring but I believe you can make them watchable as long as you stick to a few rules.

1. Keep your shots under five seconds long; preferably half that. It's amazing how fast people absorb video and the effect is greater when music is playing. It's equally amazing how quickly that shot stops being interesting.
2. Mix up shots of people with the places / scenery. A simple shot like somebody smiling, your family messing about or even a stranger doing something odd is always welcome.
3. Use shots unique to you i.e. don't feel inclined to show the landmarks. That stuff has been comprehensively covered by experienced professionals with better equipment, so there's no point competing with them. You only need to show Niagara Falls to establish that you're there.
4. Keep it short. It should be a summary of the trip, as if you're explaining it in a paragraph. Be absolutely ruthless in the edit. As soon as you've shown the Eiffel Tower from a couple of angles, it's done. Move on.
5. Try and choose music with general appeal rather than just your favourite tunes. Nobody's interested in your taste in music.
6. A tune with a consistent rythmn can give you a handy edit guide so dance music works well.
7. Don't expect anyone but yourself to enjoy it so make it for yourself to look back on.

Boydie88

3,283 posts

173 months

Tuesday 14th April 2015
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durbster said:
Personally, I love seeing places my friends and family have been and what they got up to. I'm aware I'm in a minority but don't be put off by the cynicism here. Have a go.

It is true that most holiday videos are boring but I believe you can make them watchable as long as you stick to a few rules.

1. Keep your shots under five seconds long; preferably half that. It's amazing how fast people absorb video and the effect is greater when music is playing. It's equally amazing how quickly that shot stops being interesting.
2. Mix up shots of people with the places / scenery. A simple shot like somebody smiling, your family messing about or even a stranger doing something odd is always welcome.
3. Use shots unique to you i.e. don't feel inclined to show the landmarks. That stuff has been comprehensively covered by experienced professionals with better equipment, so there's no point competing with them. You only need to show Niagara Falls to establish that you're there.
4. Keep it short. It should be a summary of the trip, as if you're explaining it in a paragraph. Be absolutely ruthless in the edit. As soon as you've shown the Eiffel Tower from a couple of angles, it's done. Move on.
5. Try and choose music with general appeal rather than just your favourite tunes. Nobody's interested in your taste in music.
6. A tune with a consistent rythmn can give you a handy edit guide so dance music works well.
7. Don't expect anyone but yourself to enjoy it so make it for yourself to look back on.
Photos on mine were 2 seconds long and as you say 90% of the time featured people in them rather than just a recreation of photos on the net already. Sometimes you'd miss details in them but for the people on the trip they were still good. Mine hit 18 minutes for an 18 day trip which sounds a lot but when played back it seems to fly by.

Clips consisted of zip lining through the Daintree rain forest, the great barrier reef, rafting the Tully, 4x4 on Fraser Island, V8 Supercars in Gold Coast, the blue mountains and some other clips that will mean more to people on the trip. Went down well for anyone that has seen it but it's more for me and the others on the trip to keep as a memory.

GetCarter

30,840 posts

303 months

Tuesday 14th April 2015
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I put some of mine (albeit not holiday) photos with music onto a DVD last year and have sold over 500 so far - at £11.95 per

...so it's not all bad news.

mike9009

9,742 posts

267 months

Tuesday 14th April 2015
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I do a bit of home video/picture editing.

It is basically to condense 12 months of my families life (two kids) to 30 minutes video. I use music relevant to that year (bands seen, chart music and music bought). I then give them as 'gifts' to relatives who we don't see often.

I never trawl through all my old photos/ video (15 years worth of digital history), but do occasionally watch these videos as a nostalgia trip - hopefully even more so in years to come....

I use a 3 second rule for photos, have an interlude and some general theme to the video. I use Sony Vegas platinum which I find easy to use, especially with the in built tutorials.

Halmyre

12,313 posts

163 months

Thursday 16th April 2015
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Randomize the picture order, set the picture duration to 2 seconds, no transitions, and overdub it with Simple Minds "I Travel". Oddly hypnotic.