Thursday, November 11, 2021

Digi Pack- Draft 1

 This is my concept idea for our digipack. Along with my other group members, this allows us to conceptualize different ideas and create lots of different "looks" which our Digi-pack creator, Georgie, can then use to create a final result.

Here is my idea:









Social Media post 1

 

Wednesday, November 10, 2021

Advanced Editing Workshop

 How to Edit a Music Video:

The first thing you must do is order your edits. Firstly you create the performance edit which is when you do the whole edit as a performance cut, without any of the non-sync or additional narrative elements. Secondly, you then do a narrative cut, which is when you would add in any additional non-sync shots or movement. Then finally, once that is completed, you can color correct all the footage collectively.


In order to start editing, you must first edit and name all your rushes in order and sync them to the song. In order to do this, there will be a clapper board, which will be used for picture syncing from the song to the footage. This will be an iPad on the shoot day which plays the synced sound. It will begin with a loud beep, followed by two snares, and then four beats within the beats per minute of the shot. 

Here are the golden rules:
  •  Something is either in sync, or it isn't. If you think it might be, but you're questioning it, it's probably not. 
  • Maintaining organization on the timeline is a must. Making sure footage is neat, organized, and synced saves loads of time. 
  • Listen to the music! If an instrument is playing, cut to that instrument.
  • For the first line of the song, you must see the lead in a close-up.
  • Group shots together, this stops the video from looking random
  • Follow the movement- this gives the video flow
  • Don't rough-cut- aim for high quality the first time
  • Break down the editing into fragments in order to accomplish everything in a timely manner.

Tuesday, November 9, 2021

My Role on Set- Creative Producer

 As a Creative Director have a few main things which I will be required to do:

First and foremost, I will be in charge of maintaining the tone and look of our video on set, this means I will be doing many things on the shooting day and the prep before the shooting day. Before, it will be my task to ensure the "dollhouse" set-up looks accurate and precise, mapped out the way our group had planned. It also means that during the shoot day, I will be working closely with Chris, the lighting technician, and Fran, the Set technician, in order to maintain the look and tone of our music video. I will also be working with the band, arranging the make-up, costumes, and particularly, the destruction of the costumes and changes which happen on-screen and off-screen. This means I will be backstage with the cast early the morning before and in the afternoon during the shoot day. I will also be looking for continuity errors, this will be particularly important during the destruction of the set, when we can no longer go back from what we've painted on or cut up, etc. It will be vital to be paying attention to the marks made when graffiting on the pink wall, so when we change from the dollhouse to the graffiti wall set, the graffiti wall doesn't have incontinuities, and errors from things we had previously filmed.






Costumes - Try on day

 Once most of the costumes had been delivered, and all the costumes had been ordered, we held a try on session to ensure everything we had provided would fit correctly and still created the look and tone we were aiming for. We were also having the band members use their own clothing, so, we wanted to make sure what ever they brought was appropriate and on brand.

First, we began simply with the prom dresses which we planned to use in the first dollhouse-like, "before being destroyed" set. We tried out different styles on each of the members in order to create a slightly different look while maintaining uniformity:


Then, We dressed them in their "messed up" destroyed set outfits, while we couldn't cut or rip any of the dresses right away, we plan to make some of them shorter, cut some of them up, or pin them in different places. We also received feedback that Cat's dress still looked too formal, and to instead put her in a leather jacket. We also didn't have Lottie's destroyed dress, so the dress you see her in is her back-up dress, just in case the dresses were unavailable, luckily however, the dresses have arrived since then.


Finally, we dressed the band in their own "edgy" graffiti wall costumes, which we were given lots of positive feedback on, and used similar colors and motifs in order to tie them all together.







Wednesday, November 3, 2021

Shotlist

 Based on our timeline, we created a shot list that depicted each and every shot we planned to take on the shooting day, this will be printed out and checked over on the shoot day, to ensure we have no gaps between narrative action, non-sync, and performance. Shot lists are key to ensuring efficiency and organization on the shooting day.





Tuesday, November 2, 2021

Step by Step

 This outline was created so our group had a guide to follow on the shoot day. This, along with the shot list, and the call sheet will be printed out for the shoot day so each person on the production crew can have a copy.






CCR Critical Relfection Question

Our product, a music campaign for a band, consisted of an all-female pop-rock group called “the Michelles”. This band was represented singul...