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Encyclopedia > Linear video editing

Linear video editing is the process of selecting, arranging and modifying the images and sound recorded on video tape whether captured by a video camera or recorded in a studio. Until the advent of computer based non-linear editing in the early 1990s "linear video editing" was simply called “video editing” . The video cassette recorder (or VCR, less popularly video tape recorder) is a type of video tape recorder that uses removable cassettes containing magnetic tape to record audio and video from a television broadcast so it can be played back later. ... A video camera can be classified two ways: Professional video cameras, such as those used in television production Camcorders used by amateurs This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ... A studio is an artists workroom. ... A non-linear editing system is a video editing or audio editing system that can perform random access on the source material. ... 1990 is a common year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar. ...


Television was basically a "live" medium until the introduction of videotape. "Editing" was performed by "switching" from amongst two or more cameras, with much the same effect as film edits. The first widely-accepted videotape in the United States was 2 inches wide and travelled at 30 inches per second. To gain enough head-to-tape speed, 4 video recording and playback heads were spun on a head wheel 'across' most of the 2 inch width of the tape. (Audio and synchronization tracks were recorded along the sides of the tape with stationary heads.) This system was known as Quad. Videotape is a means of recording television pictures and accompanying sound onto magnetic tape as opposed to movie film. ...


The resulting video tracks were slightly less than a ninety-degree angle (considering the vector addition of high-speed spinning heads tracing across the 30 inches per second forward motion of the tape).


Originally video tape was edited by physically cutting and splicing the tape, in a manner similar to film editing. This was an arduous process and not widely performed. When it was used, the two pieces of tape to be joined were painted with a solution of extremely fine iron filings suspended in carbon tetracloride. This exposed the magnetic tracks, so that they could be aligned in a splicer designed for this task. The tracks had to be cut during a vertical retrace, without disturbing the odd-field/even-field ordering. The cut also had to be at the same angle the video tracks were laid down on the tape. Film editing is the placing of one or more shots together in a sequence. ...


The television show Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In was the first and possibly only TV show to make extensive use of this method. Rowan & Martins Laugh-In was a United States comedy television show broadcast from January 22, 1968 through 1973 over the NBC network. ...


A system for editing Quad tape "by hand" was developed by the 1960s. It was really just a means of synchronizing the playback of two machines so that the signal of the new shot could be "punched in" with a reasonable chance at success. One problem with this and early computer-controlled systems was that the audio track was prone to suffer artifacs (i.e. a short buzzing sound) because the video of the newly-recorded shot would record into the side of the audio track. A commercial solution known as "Buzz Off" was used to minimize this effect.


For more than a decade, computer-controlled Quad editing systems were the standard post-production tool for television. Quad tape involved expensive hardware, time-consuming setup, relatively long rollback times for each edit and showed misalignment as disagreeable "banding" in the video. That said, it should be mentioned that Quad tape has a better bandwidth than any smaller-format analogue tape, and properly handled could produce a picture indistinguishable from that of a live camera.


When helical scan video recorders became the standard it was no longer practical to physically cut the tape. At this point video editing became a process of using two video tape machines, playing back the source tape (or raw footage ) from one machine and copying just the portions desired on to a second tape (the edit master ). Helical Scan, or striping is a method of recording higher bandwidth signals onto magnetic tape than would otherwise be possible at the same tape speed with fixed heads. ... A video tape recorder (VTR), is a tape recorder that can record video material. ... In film and video, footage is the raw, unedited material as it has been recorded by the camera, which usually must be edited to create a motion picture, video clip, television show or similar completed work. ...


The bulk of linear editing is done simply, with two machines and a device to control them. Many video tape machines are capable of controlling a second machine, eliminating the need for an editing control device.

A Sony BVE-910 linear editing console

Video editing reached its full potential in the late 1970s when computer-controlled edit suite controllers were developed, which could orchestrate an edit based on an edit decision list (EDL), using timecode to synchronize multiple tape machines and auxiliary devices. The most popular and widely used computer edit systems came from Sony, Ampex and the venerable CMX. Systems like these were expensive, (especially when considering auxiliary equipment like VTRs, video switchers and graphics generators) and were usually limited to high-end post-production facilities. Download high resolution version (1495x873, 159 KB) Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ... Download high resolution version (1495x873, 159 KB) Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ... Sony Corporation (Japanese katakana: ソニー) (TYO: 6758), (NYSE: SNE) is a global consumer electronics corporation based in Tokyo, Japan. ... 1970 was a common year starting on Thursday. ... An Edit Decision List or EDL is a standard way of representing a film edit. ... Timecode is also the title of a 2000 film directed by Mike Figgis which was shot in one continuous take. ... Sony Corporation (Japanese katakana: ソニー) (TYO: 6758), (NYSE: SNE) is a global consumer electronics corporation based in Tokyo, Japan. ... Ampex is based in Redwood City, California. ... This CMX is the Finnish band. ... A video tape recorder (VTR), is a tape recorder that can record video material. ... A Sony BVS-3200CP vision mixer A vision mixer (also called video switcher or production switcher) is a device used to select between several different video sources and in some cases composite (mix) video sources together and add special effects. ... Post production is the general term for the last stage of film production in which photographed scenes (also called footage) are put together into a complete film. ...


While computer based non-linear editing has been adopted throughout most of the commercial, film, industrial and consumer video industries, linear video tape editing is still commonplace in television station newsrooms and medium sized production facilities which haven’t made the capital investment in newer technologies. A non-linear editing system is a video editing or audio editing system that can perform random access on the source material. ... Commercial may mean: as a noun: a form of advertising, as in a television commercial as an adjective: referring to commerce or for-profit activities or trade (compare with non-profit organization) a breed of cattle, Commercial This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that... Film refers to the celluloid media on which movies are printed Film is a term that encompasses motion pictures as individual projects, as well as the field in general. ... A news program is a regularly scheduled radio or television program that reports current events. ...


The widespread availability of videotape editing led to the music video boom of the 1980s. A music video (also video clip, promo) is a short film meant to present a visual representation of a popular music song. ... 1980 is a leap year starting on Tuesday. ...


Links:

Web Site: The Museum of Early Video Editing Equipment and Techniques, April 11, 2005: URL: http://www.sssm.com/editing/museum/


Web Site: Helical Scan, A Whatis.com definition, April 11, 2005. URL: http://searchstorage.techtarget.com/sDefinition/0,,sid5_gci214473,00.html


  Results from FactBites:
 
Video Editing (1139 words)
Non-linear digital editing, a third phase, began in the late 1980s both as a response to the shortcomings of electronic transfer editing, and as a result of economic and institutional changes (the influence of music video, and the merging of film and television).
In linear time-code editing for example, changes made at minute 12 of a program, meant that the entire program after that point had to be re-edited to accomodate the change in program duration.
Video editing faces a trajectory far less predictable than that in the 1950s, when an industrial-corporate triumvirate of Ampex/RCA/NBC controlled technology and use.
Video editing software - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (208 words)
Video editing software is application software that handles the editing of video sequences on a computer.
It usually includes the ability to import and export video, cut and paste sections of a video clip, add special effects and transitions, and sometimes includes the ability to encode the video for creation of a DVD, Web video, mobile phone video or video podcast.
Video editing software generally also allows for some limited editing of the audio clips that accompany the video or, at least, the ability to sync the audio with the video.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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