Is it my camcorder
It's possible that if you remove the battery and use the AC adapter, the auto-shutoff feature will be disabled, at least someone wrote that about the ZR65 in the same family. use a little shotgun mic on a stand or a shoe mount atop the camera. Having this pointed away from the computer will help pick up your voice more clearly.
posted by planetkyoto at 10:23 PM on August 16, 2005
In almost all cases of "my video is poor", the answer is "there wasn't enough light, http://blog.arvixe.com/3how-to-add-authentication-check-to-any-clip-bucket-v2-page/ - http://blog.arvixe.com/3how-to-add-authentication-check-to-any-clip-bucket-v2-page/ ." Your exposure time is limited, since you need to record many frames per second (and, with digital camera, a small but significant amount of time is taken reading the CCD.)
Better cameras handle less light more gracefully. But all need some amount of light to work well. The trick to adding light is to make sure it is smooth and clean (that is, even over the scene, and doesn't feature odd frequency artifacts.) Read this as "Incandescent." What you want is something close to the blackbody radiation curve. Simple home incandescent lights are perfect, if bright enough (and your camera white balances correctly.)
Many pro-tv interviews are shot with low power incandescent lights, which are noticeably more yellow than home lighting. They come out looking great, because of the white balance. (and, of course, the much better camera.)
As to sound: The built in mic is almost certainly crap, and is likely to pick up camera noise. Worse, it's one of those tiny holes, which can create odd artifacts all by itself. An off camera mic -- even a cheap one -- will improve the quality of your sound.
"Shotgun" mics have the advantage of giving you more gain in the direction you are filming (and less in other directions) but often have limited frequency response, below which they become more omnidirectional. Too "tight" a shotgun means everything center frame sounds fine, but everything off center doesn't has a large high-frequency cut. So avoid the 2' long ones.
Omnidirectionals have the problem of picking up sounds you'd rather not, but high-quality omnis and moderately directional mics like cardioids are cheaper than high quality directional mics.
posted by eriko at 5:16 AM on August 17, 2005
I had a lamp on the side, as well as overhead lighting, http://www.99fog.com/forum.php?mod=viewthread&tid=1185672 - http://www.99fog.com/forum.php?mod=viewthread&tid=1185672 . This was a test in my living room, http://www.formalgownsuk.com - formal dresses 2013 , so maybe even then the lighting wasn't ample.
I figured the microphone was garbage, of that I didn't doubt. I'll try a different mic and see if that works, as well, http://www.idresslondon.co.uk - red prom dresses 2013 uk .
I played with recording directly to tape, http://www.pandorahome.co.uk - pandora Sale , and that improved it. I'd rather not have to record to tape first, as it is just simply annoying.
Any recommendations for this project, a particular camcorder to use, http://bbs.rudoctor.cn/showtopic-491291.aspx - http://bbs.rudoctor.cn/showtopic-491291.aspx ? Should I go miniDV or DVD?
posted by benjh at 6:52 AM on August 17, 2005
Odd that you are having problems with image quality. I regularly use my ZR50 for webcam use and the image quality in that usage is no different than when I am recording.
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