How to make your family videos awesome(r)!
If parenting was based on one’s ability to document life’s events in the digital age, I am pretty sure we’d all be winning.
I, like you, am there at every special event (and even some not-so-special–just-pooped on-the-toilet-for-the-first-time events) with my digital camera or video camera (or both) in hand and waving like a lunatic “Look at the camera honey, look at the camera baby!”
I don’t feel bad admitting this to you because I see you all there doing it too. At the park you’re crouching down chasing your poor toddler with a lens in his face cooing at how adorable it is he’s eating the bark chips and thanking the heavens that you’ve got this special moment saved forever in digital format. You’ve got dozens more at home. The video your partner took at his birth, the video of his first birthday cake, the hours of footage just waiting for him to do that super cute thing again. Yep. You’ve got it all there saved and waiting to bring out when he’s all grown and you’re clutching at memories and his old t-shirts he left behind.
Except if you’re anything like me you’ve probably realised that while you’re great at capturing all those special moments – whatever are you going to do with the gigabytes and gigabytes of memories you have piling up on your hard drives?
And perhaps you find this thought a little alarming and wonder how you can preserve all this precious data when you’re accumulating at a worrisome rate (but not so nearly as worrying as the rate technology keeps changing). You might lay awake and wonder how on earth you will ever get time to sit down and relive all those memories because, lets face it – you’re almost matching a second childhood just in digital files!
I’d like to share with you the how-to of a fun project I’ve been working on that has simultaneously been cutting down on my massive files of footage, letting me vent some creativity and making sure all our family memories aren’t lost into the ether.
Some mini ‘episodes’ I’ve created with our footage. These are great to share on your blog, email to friends and family and save your memories in neat little packages.
If you’d like some information on how you can do this for yourself and your footage; I’ll share with you the process I am using. This is by no means, the expert advice, just the process ~I’m~ using.
All you need to get started is some family videos and editing software.
I won’t get too technical on the actual how’s of editing your film (mostly because I have no idea what the heck I’m doing and it’s a miracle every time I complete an episode) but also because we all have different video software at home. We’ll be talking more about the process involved.
Me personally, I am using Final Cut Pro. All my footage is currently shot on the Panasonic Lumix GF1 which I highly recommend.
I have used Final Cut Express and iMovie and both of these would work great. If you’re on a PC – you’d better get offf! Nah, just kidding. I hear movie maker is good if you have it or if you want to buy something to use, I hear Adobe Premier is good (you can use a free trial to test it out).
What you’ll need to do first is see how much film you have and decide on how you want to break it down. If you take a lot of footage you might consider an episode for each fortnight or month – if you’re not that active behind the lens – perhaps one for every 6 months.
We take a lot of footage so it seemed practical to break it into monthly categories. I have been producing a 3-5 min episode for each month of all the random clips that I had taken during that time. During a month I would on average have 30 gigabytes of raw footage (!!). Once I’ve edited it down I save only less than 1 GB, so this is a great way to minimize your files.
Once you have selected the time frame you are working with – import all the footage from that time (or event) into your editing software. For me – I just import any footage taken during the month/dates I am working on.
You might be surprised at the amount of footage this equates to. The key is that you want to cut it down to the bare minimum. For each of these episodes I’ve made I have started with well over 3 hours of footage (in some cases over 10 hours!) and I want to keep every episode under 5 minutes so that is a lot to cut.
The first time you do this it might be hard.
1) First, I’d recommend you sit all the clips on my timeline in chronological order. Then you’ll want to go through and cut/delete any clips that are obviously bad (out of focus, blurry, have your husband in the background saying “DO I HAVE TO!?!”) . This will be your first cut.
SAVE YOUR PROJECT
2) Now, go through again and cut out anything that is a too long. This includes any clips that have something being done again and again. If my daughter is dancing for 5 mins I will find the best 30 seconds of her doing so and cut the rest. I know, this is hard. I am her mum and EVERYTHING she does is adorable, even after the 30th time. But my ultimate goal in making these short episodes is to only keep the best and ditch the rest. If you want to share them with your friends and family, shorter is better.
This is your second cut. SAVE
3) Once you have a good idea of the clips you are working with – choose a song to set them to. I try in my ‘Life’ series to pick a song that we listened to frequently during the month that I am editing because that appeals to my sense of nostalgia but… whatever floats your boat. Once you have the clips set out you might be prompted by what’s happening in the footage to find the song that fits just right. Song choice completely changes the mood and direction your film will go in so take some time to find the right song.
SAVE YOUR PROJECT. Srsly guys, SAVE IT.
4) Now that you have a song and the clips you are using, play around with the order they appear in. For the most part, for me, they stay in chronological order (simply because I am lazy) but I will change some around to be the intro clip or to match the lyrics of the music as I need. This is actually really fun to do so take your time and get creative.
I cannot stress this enough SAVE!!!
5) Now your project is coming together. Go through and tighten all the clips. I make sure they are as tight as they can be. This involves cutting off the beginning and end so the clip is as neat as possible. I will cut and cut and cut a clip until I have –just- what I want included. This took me sometime to get good at being brutal. Those adorable moments leading up to my son taking his first steps – they were actually really boring and I had to be real about the amount of footage we really need.
Save.
6) Once you’ve done all this you’re almost done. Play it through a few times, fiddle a bit and voilà – you’re done. I add titles but that’s up to you. Immediately after doing this I save and export. I have lost several episodes and it killed me. I export a quicktime copy and export my Final Cut Pro project (along with all the original files to an external hard drive).
Okay, that’s it!
I hope this encourages you all to give it a go and I would love, love, LOVE to see any finished products. Once you have a hang of your editing software this becomes a really fun project and I promise you it’s very rewarding.
If you have any further questions at all, just leave me a comment and I will reply as soon as I can.

