sholio: Text: "Age shall not weary her, nor custom stale her infinite squee" (Infinite Squee)
It is really interesting how my interest in visual media has spun up again over the last six months or so. It's not that I physically couldn't watch for a while, it's just that over the last couple of years, say since 2022 or so, I wasn't really interested. I would have said it was just because I was happy with the stories in my head and didn't need more stories, but I was also completely uninterested in watching vids and similar, and now suddenly that switch has flipped the other way and I'm back to finding them fun and fascinating to watch, even for source canons I barely know.

(For me and vids, I'd say song choice is *the* big driver of whether I'll watch a vid or not - I'll nope out in seconds if I don't like the song, but I'll watch one even for a source canon I've never seen if it's a song I like.)

Anyway, in a shocking twist, last night I finally got around to subscribing the things I need to subscribe to in order to get vidding source for Babylon 5.

I capture vid source like no one else I've ever met (though maybe people who do this just don't talk about it) - I screencapture from the video window playing on my computer screen. I can do it other ways, and in fact have done it a number of other ways (from ripping DVDs to ripping DRM'd MP4s - I did all my Agent Carter vids that way; it does look very crisp and beautiful - to simply using the *cough ahem* broadcast downloads back on the 2000s; a lot of people did that for vidding back in the SGA/White Collar era, although it meant dealing with watermarks on the video). But I keep coming back to capturing video from screen because it's just so easy. I can get exactly the clip I want and only the clip I want without any extra trimming work, it's easy to skip around, and it means not having to rip and store a kabillionty episodes for a long source canon.

This stopped working for a while because of software measures to prevent it, but I figured out a relatively easy workaround for vidding MASH (disabling graphics acceleration in Chrome) and now I'm doing that for B5 as well - I just need a relatively clean streaming source without commercials. I was genuinely really amazed at how crisp MASH turned out for the vids I made for Festivids. The obvious downside to screencapturing video is that the quality can suffer, and there's also the possibility of the playback stuttering - I used to have this happen occasionally when I tried to capture too much video at once on older computers (circa 2006 or so), where it would drop frames when I'd save it if it was too much for the memory buffer to handle. These days, modern computers can handle quite a lot of video at a time (I do it in Quicktime, I think it's saving directly to the hard drive as I go, whereas before it was definitely doing some kind of intermediate working-memory storage) ... buuuut capturing from streaming is limited by the streaming source, and those often stutter or glitch. It has been hard to get good video quality in B5, not really helped by the source itself being kind of potato-quality to begin with.

And as if that wasn't enough, Final Cut really struggles with the concept of 4:3 video that's not absolutely tiny. All of its large video presets are widescreen, but even forcing it to 4:3, it'll still make it widescreen in export - blah. The biggest that I can get it to make a 4:3 vid isn't very big. So it doesn't really matter that my source video isn't that high quality because it's potatoing it on export anyway! Final Cut, why are you like this.

THAT being said, the main reason I don't call myself a serious vidder is because I just sort of ... don't care? I'm not overly fussed about image quality and frame rate and codecs. I am DELIGHTED that it's no longer necessary to fuss around with codecs for the most part, now that everything seems to have standardized on MP4s and uploading to streaming sites. A ton of the vids I've downloaded and rewatch over and over are snagged from Youtube or are ancient WMVs from the era of making vids as small as possible for download, or are someone's first vidding efforts - and I *love* them. I appreciate crisp clean large video as much as the next person, but I mostly just want a fun viewing experience, and when I'm making vids, I simply like making them for myself and I'm happy if other people like them too. I'll work harder to get it looking nice if it's an actual gift for someone, but for the ones I make for myself ... eh. It's a lot like my approach to fanfic as a creator - I do care about craft to an extent, but mostly, I don't care if it's great, I just want to feel things.

(So the long and the short of it is that I'm making Babylon 5 vids now. Yay!)
sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)
I've noticed a trend lately with downloadable vids getting huge, like around 200-250 Mb.

It might be that this is completely intentional and people are putting them out in the highest possible quality, and no one is really that concerned about bandwidth/disk space anymore. I'm also not sure if anyone but me still downloads vids anyway. But it might also be, for some people, that it's just what your vidding program does and you can't get it smaller without a major loss of quality, or you don't have the option to make it smaller at all. I have that problem with mine and I have a couple of simple workarounds for making smaller vids without too much loss of quality, in case you wanted to offer people a less enormous download.

#1 - Upload it to Youtube, then download it from Youtube, by prefixing "ss" to the "youtube" part of the vid URL. This will take you to a page where you have the option of downloading it. (Or using whatever other means you normally use to gank stuff from Youtube, if you do that.) The size and quality you get is a bit hit or miss, but usually you'll end up with a decent-quality file that is much smaller than the original, and it's easy and free. You used to be able to do this even better with Vimeo (and from within the Vimeo site itself, with the option of choosing your vid size), until they did away with downloads on the free version, but I'm pretty sure the paid version can still do it if you happen to have that already.

#2 - On a Mac, you can export it from Quicktime. I'm not 100% sure this feature is free, because over the years I've paid for Quicktime Pro on several different computers and I honestly can't recall if this computer is one of them or if they've added a bunch of the Quicktime Pro features to the standard Quicktime installation. However, if you have the option, what you want is Export under the file menu. I usually export to iTunes, in which case it shows up in the iTunes music folder, in a folder called Home Movies, and you can then drag it anywhere. With my older copy of Final Cut, exporting a full-size MOV from Final Cut and then using this to make it into an MP4 often got me a nicer-quality file for its size than Final Cut's native export options.

And of course, if it's intentional, then no need to worry about it. I do kinda want to put out there that offering a smaller sized download option is something that some of us still appreciate, if you can. (This is not aimed at anyone specific, and it's not even something I've run into that recently; it's brought to you by me smallening a downloadable version of a vid that had exported from Final Cut as a 240 Mb MP4, because no.)
sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)
Aaaaa! I've learned how to do subtitles on vids!!

I've been wanting to do this for awhile, but I always thought there would be a steep learning curve and/or you'd need special software. Come to find out, you can make .srt files in a text editor; you just have to put in the timestamps for each line of subtitle manually. (I'm using this method.) It really doesn't take long for a 3-minute vid, and I've fallen down the rabbit hole of tweaking the start and end of each subtitle. OH LOOK, A BRAND NEW VIDDING TIMESINK. XD

These subtitles are not embedded in the vid (I think you do actually need special software for that), but if the .srt file is in the folder with the vid and it's opened in VLC, it ought to work - it works great for me!

Right now I'm making subs for the Flash vid I'm currently working on, but now that I know how to do it, are there any of my old vids that anyone would like subtitles for and/or fandoms that you'd like to request subtitles in? In theory I can now make them for literally any vid, not just my own; it's just that I need to be able to open it in a vid player that will give me second-accurate timestamps since I need to look up the start and end for each subtitle line to get the timing right.

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sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)
Sholio

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