Home
Home

Directory
Directory

Articles
Internet News
Security News
Ecommerce News
Domain News

Site Tools
Site Speed Test
Keyword Research
Resolve Hostname
DNS Tools
Register Domains
Affiliate Programs
Open Source

Shopping Carts
Cart Reviews
SSL Certificates

Enter your email address to subscribe to our updates:

Delivered by FeedBurner


Venue Charts
Channel Traffic Rankings
OAI Stock Quotes and Charts
eBay's Worst Feedback

Forum
Forum Home
TulipTools News
Advertising
Blogging
Computer Hardware
Domain Names
Ecommerce
Financing
Int'l Trading
Graphics and HTML
Internet Access
Legal Issues
Internet Business
Auction Sites
Classified Ad Sites
Fixed Price Venues
Operating Systems
Programming
Search Engines
Internet Security
Software
Web Hosting
Webmaster Issues
Reviews
Announcements
Off Topic Discussion

Web Hosting
TulipHosting

Domain Names
TulipDomains

Web Stats
TulipStats

Forum Rules
Forum Rules
Privacy Policy

Site Map
Forum Sitemap
Sitemap Topics




Directory| Forums| Internet News|Cart Reviews| DNS Tools| Keyword Research| Site Speed Test| Security| | Domain Marketplace| Domain Blog
TulipTools Internet Business Owners and Online Sellers Community
  • Home
  • Search
  • Member List
  • Calendar
Hello There, Guest! Login Register
TulipTools Internet Business Owners and Online Sellers Community › Graphics, Ajax, HTML, Multimedia, Web Design › Graphics, Ajax, HTML, Multimedia, Web Design › Graphics and Multimedia › Audio, Video, and Multimedia v
« Previous 1 2 3

Put down your makeup kits, ladies. It ain't gonna help!

  
Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Threaded Mode | Linear Mode
Put down your makeup kits, ladies. It ain't gonna help!
07-31-2006, 07:54 AM,
Post: #1
misteroriginal Offline
Plum Devotee
******
Posts: 589
Likes Given: 0
Likes Received: 0 in 0 posts
Joined: Sep 2005
Reputation: 0
Put down your makeup kits, ladies. It ain't gonna help!
If you want to make sexy videos for YouTube, Google, and other sites, you need to know a little bit about camcorders. Basically, a digital camcorder is going to come in 1-CCD (charge-coupled device) and 3-CCD models. The CCD is the thing that collects the light. The more you have, and the bigger they are, the better. The 3-CCD camcorders tend to be almost three times as expensive becuase the CCD is the most expensive and important component. The big advantage is they handle color much better since they split it into its RGB components, handling each color seperately. All the camcorders at Wal-mart have 1-CCD.

A second consideration is the format that you are using. Basically you can divide it into three groups based on data rate: 25Mbps, 50Mbps, 100 Mbps. All the cameras at Wal-mart will be 25Mbps. One of the things they do to conserve space is reduce the amount of color information in the picture. The human is more sensitive to light than color, so they can get away with it to a certain extent. It's called chroma subsampling, and your options are 4:1:1, 4:2:2, and 4:4:4 which is basically saying that Wal-mart camcorders have half the color information of TV camcorders which have half the color information of High Definition Camcorders.

The final consideration, for now, is lighting. ALL light has color. Sunlight is the closest to white, but it tends to look orangish in the evening (which is awesome for skintones!). But, if you mix lighting, such as tungsten light with sunlight, you are likely to get a nasty sour grape colored face.

Translation: The average consumer camcorder produces grayish skintones because the cheap camcorders cannot handle red very well, and all the colors tend to be undersaturated. You cannot tell by looking at them in the store, because much of this horror happens when the image is compressed to tape. Some manufacturers, like Sony, "aim" the color output toward good looking skintones. This is important to keep in mind if you plan on faking a Paris Hilton-style, copycat video. The problem is this produces a color-cast that affects other objects in your picture.

The solution, to a certain extent, is color-correction in post-production with Final Cut Pro, Adobe Premiere, After Effects, or even Photoshop. Another possibility is to plan for the color-problems like they did when they filmed the Wizard of Oz. They acutally ran tests to get Dorothy's dress to be the perfect shade of blue, even though (if I remember right) the acutal dress is more pinkish. They knew the Technicolor prrocess would through the color off in a certain direction by a certain amount, so the planned for it.
Like Post Reply
[+]
« Next Oldest | Next Newest »




Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Will Video Clips help Etailers build customer traffic and sales? mandy 0 2,619 02-12-2007, 09:51 AM
Last Post: mandy

  • View a Printable Version
  • Send this Thread to a Friend
  • Subscribe to this thread
Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
  • Contact Us
  • TulipTools Internet Business Owners and Online Sellers Community
  • Return to Top
  • Lite (Archive) Mode
  • RSS Syndication
  • Help
Current time: 03-11-2026, 09:54 AM Powered By MyBB, © 2002-2026 MyBB Group. Theme created by Justin S.
powered by Apache

powered by Linuxpowered by CentOS

Copyright 2000-2013 TulipTools.com. All rights reserved.