Video Celebrates America the Beautiful
By Internet Video Gal in Featured Video, Video Editing
Learn more about video editing with instructions on how I edited this gorgeous video celebrating America the Beautiful.
How I Made this Video
I love making videos like this one celebrating America the Beautiful. More importantly, almost everyone likes watching videos like this. Gorgeous visuals and quality music blended together with a peaceful, natural ease.
If you added some narration, you could turn this video into a message on many subjects other than the obvious: Celebrating the Fourth of July in the United States. Add some narration with a subtle sales message using a theme of solidarity and strength for your online audience, no matter what niche you are in.
To make this video, I gathered all the elements I needed into a new editing project in Final Cut. I knew EXACTLY what kind of video I wanted to make, so it was just a matter of hunting for all the individual elements and then putting them together.
LAY DOWN A BACKGROUND
I first took a full screen, slowly waving flag animation and laid it down on video line one for the background. I slowed it down further than it already was, bringing it down to about 50% speed. To access speed in final cut, highlight the clip and control/click to bring up a menu for several attributes including speed. The flag stays constant throughout the video so to make the clip long enough, I had to loop the animation several times. It really did not loop well, I was a tad disappointed. There was a pretty bad shadow jump but I lived with it. Did you notice? Probably not. One in 10,000 people would probably notice a detail that small so I decided it was not worth the time and effort it would take to dump the clip and finding another one.
As I often do with background clips, I took the flag out of focus with a gausian blur filter. Doing this makes the video you stack on top of it pop-out better. The flag is a background, and it needs to be unobtrusive as it adds to the overall affect.
I then got a shot of the Statue of Liberty and put it on video line #2 in my timeline. I matted out the background, which was mostly blue sky, with an 8-point garbage matt filter. I softened the edges of it quite a bit, so some sky still shows around her. The blue sky looks pretty on top of the flag.
DIGITAL, KEYFRAME ZOOM-IN
Then I keyframed the zoom-in to Lady Liberty’s face. The original shot was just a static wide shot. I wanted a zoom in on her face so I did it digitally with keyframes. To do this, you put a keyframe at the beginning of the shot. Then you add another keyframe at the point where you want the movement to stop. On the first keyframe, you give the clip one size attribute and on the second keyframe, you give it another, closer-in size attribute. To zoom in on the face and get it centered correctly, it was also necessary for me to keyframe the center point of the 8-point garbage matt. An 8-point garbage matt is a filter where you select 8 points within the clip to design the shape of the matt. You use this for odd-shaped objects.
I brought the opacity (transparency) down of the clip just a touch so you could see the flag waving thru her face. The Statue of Liberty also stays all the way through the video and I wanted it to blend well with the flag, so I made her semi-transparent, and gave her an 80% opacity. Fiddling with the opacity of clips is one of the easiest ways to give a video an artistic touch.
ROYALTY FREE MUSIC IS ALWAYS BEST
The music is a one-minute royalty free clip of America the Beautiful. With a classic song like that, the song itself is in the public domain but the performance is usually not. It would not be lawful for me to take a performance by a popular artist singing America the Beautiful and use it with my video. Since it is a public domain song, I could sing and record it but TRUST ME, no one with ears wants to listen to me sing. So I stick with a royalty free clip.
FILL IN THE VIDEO
Now, the rest of the edit job consisted of filling in the rest of the timeline with visual images that flowed together nicely, and giving the overall piece a soothing cadence.
I gathered up lots of royalty free video clips I already own and have stored on my computer. Any shot the could be labeled “Americana” I selected and put into the bin. City skylines, national parks, gorgeous scenery. I drug the clips into my bin in my final cut project.
I spent the next few hours putting them on top of the flag. I adjusted the size, gave nice, soft edges for the borders, added drop shadows. Some clips looked better if I cut them out with an oval matte. The oval matt is found in “filters.” I adjusted the position of the clips with keyframing. I made the clips move in from outside of the frame using key framing. I added keyframe to the clips and adjusted the center position to make them move into the frame and snuggle close to Lady Liberty.
DISSOLVES ARE GREAT EDITING TRANSITIONS
I mix the shots in and out using good, old-fashioned dissolves and fades. Nothing beats a dissolve or fade. (A dissolve is where one shot fades out and another fades in. A fade is where there is only one shot, and it fades in from nothingness. This is actually an adjustment to the opacity of the shot.)
I adjusted the speed of many of the dissolves here to make the pace a bit slower and to make it all blend more smoothly. The default dissolve is 1 second, or 30-frames. I like to slow that down to 2 or 3 seconds for a more peaceful feeling. You do this by double clicking on the dissolve icon once it is in the timeline. this pouts it back into your viewer window. From the viewer window, you can adjust the length of the dissolve.
Once I am done tweaking my keyframes and getting the movement speeds to fit the moment, I pronounce in done.
Finis!
Last step is to convert the video into a sharing format for upload to the web. I export the timeline as an MPEG4 for upload to the internet. MPEG4 is one of my favorites because it looks good but has a small file size. The video host I use, veeple, converts it to flash. Veeple gives me some embed code which I copy/paste into the blog so you can see the video.
And there you have it folks! Another exciting video editing journey with Lorraine Grula, Internet Video Gal.
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