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Wiley iMovie '09 & iDVD '09 For Dummies
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1. ve dismissed the Welcome dialog you re left with iMovie s main window which Apple refers to as the Workspace see Figure 1 2 This is the Workspace s default configuration You can up to a point change which panes are shown and in what positions via iMovie s preference settings iMovie Preferences or 8 comma items in the View menu and items in the Window menu By default you see the Project Library pane in the upper left the Viewer pane in the upper right and the Event Library in the lower half The Event Library is split into a hierarchical view on the left and a browser view on the right displaying the clips in any selected event with a horizontal toolbar in the middle of the Workspace and a control bar for the Event Library along the bottom of the window Although we laud Apple s user interface consistency every once in a while even they slip up and we think this is one of those situations The Project Library has similar controls to the Event Library and it is clear that the controls belong to the Project Library by their appearance The controls for the Event Library don t match in the same way appearing as part of the window frame But if you click the toolbar button to swap the Project and Events areas the controls swap appearance as well It just goes to show you that nobody s perfectly consistent iMovie File Edit View Text Share Window Help Oy Se MBMA Welcome to iMovie 09
2. 09 is a vast improvement on the previous release and an alternative is no longer necessary nor provided Similarly Apple introduced iDVD at the January 2001 Macworld Expo providing a tool that enabled purchasers of Macs with the new SuperDrives the first DVD burners priced for the consumer market from Pioneer to produce their own DVDs The iDVD in iLife 09 is to all intents and purposes the same iDVD that shipped as part of iLife 08 The only changes are compatibility updates for the other applications in iLife 09 Henceforth in this book we refer to the current software as iLife iMovie iDVD GarageBand iPhoto and so on and include a version number only if we find it necessary to discuss an earlier software iteration Knowing What Goes into Making a Movie Just about any movie that anyone would be willing to watch requires some planning organization and editing Assuming that the content is coming from a camcorder planning includes being sure to start filming a few seconds before the desired scene to avoid missing the first frame and letting the camera run a few seconds after the end of scene so as not to prematurely end the scene One of the great things about digital editing in iMovie is how easy it is to trim the footage so that you can start and end each scene with exactly the frames you want Chapter 1 Making and Sharing Movies Of formats and frame rates Historically there have been basically two
3. broadcast standards NTSC and PAL Minor variations existed but NTSC and PAL have been the name of the game outside of France which still employs a standard called SECAM that was common in Eastern Europe before the fall of the Iron Curtain when the formerly Communist nations switched to PAL NTSC is the standard in North and Central America most South American countries Japan the Philippines and a number of Asian and Pacific Island countries whereas some variety of PAL is the standard almost everywhere else except as mentioned France The two major differences between the NTSC and PAL formats are the frame rate how many frames of video make up a second of footage and frame size the number of video scan lines in a frame NTSC uses 30 fps frames per second really 29 97 but most of the literature rounds this off and PAL uses 25 fps Similarly NTSC has 525 scan lines and PAL has 625 some of which are unused If you re curious about the nitty gritty details the math and the exceptions we recommend that you start by searching the Web for more info on NTSC and PAL While you re Googling check out some info on ATSC the format for digital television that supports HDTV to see how the digital transition has simplified many items while introducing its own new technical details to confuse the typical TV viewer Organization includes having your camera and microphone if you have an external microphone
4. positioned to catch the scene to the best advantage In other words your scene needs to be properly lit with the audio pickup where you ll catch and immortalize any dialogue We could show you a wedding video where the camcorder was behind the groom by about 15 feet and his vows didn t come through In fact when you can arrange to do so have multiple cameras recording from different angles iMovie makes it easy to splice in both audio and video and having multiple sources not only means that you re far less likely to miss something but that you can use the best audio while cutting from one camera angle to another to best present your scene That s why professional videographers use multiple cameras too Other organizational items include making sure that you have adequate batteries or available power sufficient media be it tape flash memory MiniDVDs or available hard drive space and satisfactory lighting And if your movie is scripted you need to make sure that everyone knows what they re supposed to do and say as well as where they re supposed to be while giving their performance The editing well that s just what we re going to cover in subsequent chap ters mostly in Chapters 5 and 6 iMovie lets you do easily almost anything that a professional editor does without all of the hard work and training 9 0 Part Pre Production and Getting Started Understanding the Movie Making Process Oversimplifying t
5. 7 NY P Making and Sharing Movies In This Chapter Introducing iMovie Finding your way around the iMovie interface Planning your movie Finding what s where in iDVD Implementing your plan a Movie and iDVD parts of the iLife 09 suite which includes iTunes iPhoto iMovie iDVD GarageBand and iWeb form the digital video spoke of Apple s so called Digital Hub iLife is bundled with new Macintosh comput ers and available separately for a 79 list price iDVD is unchanged from the very mature version shipped in iLife 08 other than a couple of minor updates iMovie on the other hand has dozens of new fea tures a few of which are the new Precision Editor chapter comment and beat markers and themes This chapter details the steps along the way that brought iMovie and iDVD to their current incarna tions You also get a brief tour of the iMovie and iDVD Workspaces Additionally we cover topics you should keep in mind when planning and creat ing your movies so that you can achieve the best end result Getting to iLife 09 In 1999 Apple introduced the iMac DV Digital Video the first consumer computer to come with a FireWire port as standard equipment To demonstrate FireWire s speed and capability the iMac DV included a new application named iMovie iMovie was a groundbreaking introduction of home video editing to the masses or as Apple prefers to say the rest of us geared to us
6. The best way to get to know iMovie 09 is to see it in action If you re new to iMovie watch this Getting Started video to see how easy it is to make a great looking movie Click to Play gt Z Shaw this window when iMovie apers 11 J2 Figure 1 2 Your iMovie Workspace SSS Part I Pre Production and Getting Started Show Camera Import window Full Screen Arrow tool Advanced only Project Library pane Narration Mark as Favorite Play Project from beginging New Project Show Inspector Swap Projects Audio Skimming On Off and Mark as Events panes Rejected Viewer la gsis Audio Level at playhead Photo Browser Transitions Browser Sait pa Maps and Backgrounds Browser Titles Browser Music and Sound Effects Browser Event Browser i Frames Thumbnail slider Hide Show Keyword Filtering pane Unmark Crop Rotate and Ken Burns tool Keyword tool Advanced only Play Event from Begining Add to Project tool Keyword Filtering pane Full Screen Clip Filter pop up Hide Show Event Library pane Event Library pane If you have movie clips in your iPhoto Library iMovie asks you whether you want thumbnails created for use in your Event Library now or whether you wish to wait and perform the processing later as shown in Figure 1 3 This activity takes place because a lot of still cameras are capable of recording video and iPhoto im
7. cess iMovie and its companion iPhoto help you by grouping footage and images into events content organized initially by time but customizable by you We discuss events in more detail in Chapter 3 Entire books are dedicated to the art and science of film making If you re interested a good starting point is Filmmaking For Dummies Bryan Michael Stoller Wiley Publishing Figuring Out What s Where in iMovie The first time you launch iMovie by clicking its icon in the Dock a five pointed star with a circled video camera in the center as shown in the margin you encounter a screen that looks like Figure 1 1 Some minor details in the menu bar and Dock may differ depending on your screen size and what software you have installed but the iMovie window and the Welcome to iMovie dialog will be the same Apple realizes that you probably won t want to see the Welcome dialog every time you launch iMovie so they include a check box in the lower left corner that you can deselect after you ve taken advantage of the information it offers or decide that you don t want to investigate You won t see it again unless ANG O T Figure 1 1 Presenting iMovie E a Chapter 1 Making and Sharing Movies you choose HelpWelcome to iMovie The tutorials are useful and exhibit the quality and attention to detail that we ve come to expect from Apple we heartily recommend them as an adjunct to this book After you
8. e the early generation of Clays Westy Takahase 8g Part l Pre Production and Getting Started air MiniDV tape based camcorders from companies like Sony Canon and JVC All of these companies agreed on FireWire as the standard protocol for trans ferring video although it was sometimes called something else like iLink or IEEE 1394 And iMovie was easy to use far more so than professional packages like Apple s Final Cut or Adobe s Premiere Apple improved and enhanced iMovie through six versions the last two of which included HD for High Definition as part of their name However although it was still easier to use than the competition iMovie gained com plexity along with its new capabilities and was still based on code that was originally written for pre OS X Macs Then in late 2007 with the release of iLife 08 a new version of iMovie was introduced Old timers like us recognized that the new iMovie made getting started a lot easier and that it fit into the OS X mold more comfortably than its predecessors but we also noticed that a lot of functionality was either missing or in a few cases relocated to GarageBand the audio editing application in the iLife 09 suite Apple recognized that many of their existing users would be dissatisfied with the new iMovie just as new users would be enthused by how easy it was to use so Apple made iMovieHD available to iLife 08 owners as a free down load The iMovie in iLife
9. he subject tremendously movies fall into one of two catego ries documentaries or scripted Documentaries include not just the polished product of collecting and narrating historic footage but efforts as unpolished as the traditional home movie where you just throw the camera up and grab footage of some unplanned event such as baby s first steps animals frolicking or the first time your child succeeds in riding his two wheeler Scripted movies range from recording planned scenes such as class lectures to elaborately scripted vehicles that include not only prepared dialogue but elaborate stage direction Television tends to blur traditional categorization referring to the current plethora of reality shows as unscripted however they fall more into the scripted category than not with prepared venues and planned activities The shows lack only the precise details of a traditional scripted show just as a variety show or a talk show leaves a lot of room for improvisation although it s still a planned show The stunts or routines in a show like Survivor or Dancing with the Stars are planned and scripted but how well they re exe cuted varies just as the host of a talk show has a prepared list of questions or script but doesn t always know how the guest is going to respond Just because most home movies are basically documentary immortalizing events and activities doesn t mean you can t put a little structure into the pro
10. ing and Sharing Movies 7 The Create a New Project button does just what the name suggests Click it and you re presented with the Create Project dialog shown in Figure 1 7 where you name your project in the Save As text box specify where the project should be saved in the Where pop up menu or click the down pointing arrow to the right of the Save As text box and navigate in the expanded Save dialog to another location and click the radio button that tells iDVD whether the project is going to have a 4 3 aspect ratio Standard or 16 9 Widescreen The Open an Existing Project button also is self descriptive presenting you with an Open dialog that enables you to select an existing project with which you wish to work Use Magic DVD to quickly assemble a DVD from a collection of existing videos and photos just drag and drop the media into iDVD and Magic DVD does the rest OneStep DVD lets you import video directly from your camera or a movie and put it on DVD OneStep DVD is an excellent way to make a quick DVD of video you don t intend to edit OneStep DVD and Magic DVD are covered in Chapter 13 Now we re just going to briefly introduce the iDVD Workspace you see when you create a new project or open an existing project Create Project Save As My Great DVD Where jj Documents H Aspect Ratio Standird 4 3 O Widescreen 16 9 _ Cancel Create Themes Buttons and the Media Browser When
11. netic interference DVDs and their predecessors VideoCDs VCD and Super VideoCDs SVCD eliminated the generational degradation inherent in the analog copying process by moving to digital technology That quality loss is avoided only when you re creating a duplicate not when you re re encoding to a different format a process known as transcoding All standard distribution formats such as MPEG 1 MPEG 2 MPEG 4 and DivX or Xvid employ lossy data compression to keep the size of your video manageable just as JPEG compresses images and MP3 and AAC compress audio in a manner that throws away some hopefully unimportant bits In addition to DVDs we now have iPods iPhones Web pages YouTube and a myriad of other distribution venues for our content iMovie with the help of QuickTime lets you choose which output format or formats you desire You can create a movie optimized for iPod viewing create a copy targeted to Apple TV and then instruct iMovie to send the content off to iDVD It s up to you to decide how you want your movies distributed and we give you a helping hand with the details in Chapter 12 and give extensive coverage to iDVD in Part IV 16 Part I Pre Production and Getting Started Checking Out iDVD aM Figure 1 6 iDVD s Select a Task window Although we now have many different venues and methods for sharing our videos we re still particularly partial to the DVD Almost eve
12. on You can modify this granularity by moving the duration slider When you hover the cursor over a clip its duration appears at the left just above an action drop down menu the little gear icon with the down pointing arrowhead to its right and a red positional indicator line follows your scrubbing action the movement back and forth through the clip while the particular frames play in the Viewer Along the control bar at the bottom of the window the left most button controls whether the Events list is showing or hidden if the Events list is present the little arrowhead points to the left indicating that you can click to hide the Events list slide it out of view to the left If the Events list is hidden the arrowhead is on the right indicating that you can bring the Events list back into view The next button to the right when clicked puts you in full screen mode The menu bar Dock and all your windows disap pear as shown in Figure 1 5 When you first enter full screen mode only the viewer area is visible but if you move your cursor to the bottom of the screen the controls appear Pressing the spacebar toggles between playing and pausing whatever is being viewed You can also play events full screen by choosing Window Show Events Full Screen 8 7 14 Part I Pre Production and Getting Started Project My First Prajuct Drag media here to create a new project a TIBI 0 Event Library iPhoto Videos Jan 3 2009 Sz
13. ports those videos into the iPhoto Library As we discuss in Chapter 2 iMovie works with content from a variety of sources including iPhoto SS Figure 1 3 Now or later for iPhoto video thumbnails ar Chapter 1 Making and Sharing Movies 13 iPhoto Video Thumbnails iMovie needs to generate thumbnails for the videos in your iPhoto library This process may take several minutes You can postpone this operation by clicking Later but your iPhoto videos will be unavailable until the next time you restart iMovie Later C Now In this example we told iMovie to process the iPhoto videos so that we have some content in our Event Library to illustrate the rest of this discussion That s why the Event Library sports an iPhoto Videos item in the following screenshots an item that wasn t present in Figure 1 2 Exploring the Event Library As shown in Figure 1 4 we selected iPhoto Videos in the Event Library list on the left and its four clips appear to the right The number of thumbnails and thus the apparent clip length is controlled by the duration slider at the bottom right of the window the duration selected determines how many thumbnails are shown In our example the duration is set for 5 seconds so clips shorter than 5 seconds in length are one thumbnail wide between 5 and 10 seconds are two thumbnails wide and if we had a longer clip of between 10 and 15 seconds it would be three wide and so
14. ryone we know and certainly everyone we know with whom we want to share content has a DVD player Not everyone we know has an Internet connection particularly the broadband variety that is a virtual necessity for accessing viewable video over the ether Although Apple didn t enhance iDVD s feature set in iLife 09 they did revise iDVD for compatibility with the other iLife applications and included iDVD as one of the six iLife components This is apparently an acknowledgement on Apple s part that although they consider DVD an old technology that is going to be made obsolete by online and high definition offerings it is still a dominant distribution venue at this time The Select a Task window When you first launch iDVD you see the window shown in Figure 1 6 Along the window s bottom you find a Help button question mark a button that launches your Web browser and takes you to Apple s Web site and the page with the iDVD tutorials Video Tutorials and a Quit button The tutorials don t teach you anything that isn t in this book but they are presented as video so if watching a video helps you learn the tutorials are a helpful adjunct to what you re holding iDVD Create a New Project Open an Existing Project Magic iDVD OneStep DVD 2 video Tutorials 2 Video Tutorial EEE Figure 1 7 Specify your project s name location and aspect ratio here aaa Chapter 1 Mak
15. turday January 3 2099 eee gle Eee Figure 1 4 i The Events Library with an event selected a Action drop down menu button Duration slider Fullscreen mode Show Hide Events list aS Figure 1 5 View your event video full screen Chapter 1 Making and Sharing Movies 15 If you have the controls showing in full screen mode you can scrub across the thumbnails to determine what s visible in the viewer Clicking the circled X at the bottom left of the screen exits full screen mode but if you don t want to have to show the controls you can also exit full screen mode by pressing Esc The Show pop up menu refer to Figure 1 4 lets you control which clips are shown in the Event pane Favorites only Favorites and Unmarked 88 L All Clips or Rejected Clips We cover rejecting clips and marking favorites in Chapter 4 Deciding on a Distribution Plan NING Modern technology has significantly expanded how and where we can share our video products It wasn t all that long ago that camcorders were bulky things that recorded on VHS Beta or VHS C video cassettes and distribution was pretty much limited to duplicating tapes and handing or sending out copies Besides the enormous inconvenience copying tape was a lossy proposition meaning quality was lost both from duplicating analog data and the fact that tape was flexible stretched with repeated use and was magnetic making it susceptible to electromag
16. ubtitles are on or off or whether to play a narration track Although they re called buttons as you ll see in the following list they don t have to look like computer or physical buttons at all Your choices are 1 Text Simple text although you can designate an underlining style that appears when the button is selected Bullets Small icons that show up when the button is selected Shapes Graphic elements that appear behind the button when selected Frames Framing rectangles Artistic Fancy borders for your button Rectangle Various boxes that surround your button Rounded Curved boxes that surround your button MBER With any of the last four button types selecting the slashed circle icon from the styles that appear in that category applies a default border to your button but selecting any other style includes a graphic thumbnail displaying a preview of your content the default is a 30 second video loop Chapter 1 Making and Sharing Movies 9 Selecting Media allows you to specify content for use on your DVD either as part of the menu structure or the actual content You see the Media Browser a lot in this book it s the interface between the different iLife applications For example in iDVD you would use the Media Browser to select movies created in iMovie audio created in GarageBand or stored in your iTunes Library and photos from your iPhoto Library Part I Pre Production and Getting Started
17. you click Create the dialog disappears and you ll see a progress dialog while iDVD loads the Themes and so on before you arrive at the main project window shown in Figure 1 8 The leftmost pane displays the menu on which you re currently working initially it shows the main menu for the selected Theme The pane to the right displays available Themes Buttons or the Media Browser depending upon which of the three buttons below the pane you ve clicked Themes includes a pop up menu where you choose from which set of themes you want to make your selection All those that appeared with iDVD 7 those debuting in iDVD 6 those introduced in iDVD 5 those from older versions of iDVD or those you specify as Favorites Themes have the same purpose as templates in a word processing or graphics program You select a theme to provide your DVD with a consistent design employing professionally designed backgrounds buttons and other elements 18 Part I Pre Production and Getting Started 7 0 Themes Chapters Figure 1 8 Introducing the iDVD project Eem window e Clicking Buttons enables you to specify how you want your menu buttons to appear Unlike the computer based menus to which you re accustomed a DVD menu is a screen with buttons or labels on it Menu buttons are the visual elements that you navigate and select with your DVD remote control selecting such things as what to play whether s
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