making 1 movie out of many?

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Guest

Before I set out on this discovery, Question: Can I take multiple (saved to .avi for transfer back to camera) movies and string them all in to one movie project and save it to .avi (so I can transfer the whole thing back to my camera) without loss, skips or some other hiccup?
Thanks
 
If your lucky! Yes, if you makeone movie and save it to your hard drive as
an avi. then make your next movie and also save as an avi, it's easy to then
make another project and just import the two avi's, save as an avi and you
have one movie.

--
Graham Hughes
MVP
www.simplydv.co.uk
www.dvds2treasure.com
mike4advtr said:
Before I set out on this discovery, Question: Can I take multiple (saved
to .avi for transfer back to camera) movies and string them all in to one
movie project and save it to .avi (so I can transfer the whole thing back to
my camera) without loss, skips or some other hiccup?
 
Sure.... but test your setup and process with a short clip first. A 5 minute
segment should do.
--
PapaJohn

Movie Maker 2 - www.papajohn.org
Photo Story 2 - www.photostory.papajohn.org

..
mike4advtr said:
Before I set out on this discovery, Question: Can I take multiple (saved
to .avi for transfer back to camera) movies and string them all in to one
movie project and save it to .avi (so I can transfer the whole thing back to
my camera) without loss, skips or some other hiccup?
 
Technically, it won't be a lossless process, since you'll
be subjecting your video to another encoding/compression
operation. But the loss of quality will probably (hopefully)
not even be noticable.

--
-Bob
____________________________
Microsoft MVP
Windows XP Media Center Edition
www.microsoft.com/ehome


mike4advtr said:
Before I set out on this discovery, Question: Can I take multiple (saved to .avi for transfer back to camera) movies and string
them all in to one movie project and save it to .avi (so I can transfer the whole thing back to my camera) without loss, skips or
some other hiccup?
 
Thanks Bob & Papa,
So For best result just transfer all my movies with a start and stop action on my video camera instead of using mm2 as a "movie train" so to speak, that way there is no loss. Is this the understanding?
 
You can control the starts and stops of the camcorder using MM2.... assuming
you're using a firewire connection and capturing the files as DV-AVI.
--
PapaJohn

Movie Maker 2 - www.papajohn.org
Photo Story 2 - www.photostory.papajohn.org

..
mike4advtr said:
Thanks Bob & Papa,
So For best result just transfer all my movies with a start and stop
action on my video camera instead of using mm2 as a "movie train" so to
speak, that way there is no loss. Is this the understanding?
 
I might do that if there were only a few clips on
the tape that I wanted to capture. But in general
I wouldn't use the "start and stop action" to
edit my movies. Why sacrifice all the editing
features that MM2 has to offer, for a difference
in quality that's probably not even perceptable?

PapaJohn's original suggestion was the best.
Experiment using a few short clips, and see how
it turns out. There's no substitute for experience,
and in the end, no one's opinion really matters
except your own. :-)

--
-Bob
____________________________
Microsoft MVP
Windows XP Media Center Edition
www.microsoft.com/ehome


mike4advtr said:
Thanks Bob & Papa,
So For best result just transfer all my movies with a start and stop action on my video camera instead of using mm2 as a "movie
train" so to speak, that way there is no loss. Is this the understanding?
 
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