Synopses & Reviews
Techniques matter! Great ideas don't automatically translate into great programs. It's not enough simply to show what is going on. The way you present your subject will influence how your audience responds. You need to choose your picture and sound carefully, to convey your ideas in an interesting, persuasive way. This book will show you how.
Video Production Handbook shows the full production process, from inception of idea to final distribution. The book focuses especially on why each step occurs as it does and provides guidance in choosing the simplest methods of creating the shots you want in your video project. Concentrating on the techniques and concepts behind the latest equipment, this book demonstrates the fundamental principles needed to create good video content on any kind of budget.
Suitable for students and beginning videographers, the new edition of this classic text retains its clarity and directness but has been completely revised and updated.
This practical sourcebook has been specially prepared to give you an at-a-glance guide to quality video program-making on a modest budget. Emphasis throughout is on excellence with economy; whether you are working alone or with a small multi-camera group. The well-tried techniques detailed here will steer you through the hazards of production, helping you to avoid those frustrating, time-wasting problems, and to create an effective video program.
* Highly visual: more than 450 full color photos and illustrations demonstrate techniques * Modern: Revised by Jim Owens, who brings a wealth of hands-on experience to the text; up-to-date information on current equipment, techniques, and new distribution outlets such as the Web and mobile phones * A complete resource: Detailed teaching ancillaries are available for instructors, including instructor's manual, test bank, sample syllabi, image collection, video content, and more * Brand new coverage of contemporary distribution methods * Interviews featuring industry professionals provide students with inside knowledge of the industry * Sidebars featuring new coverage of topics such as shooting for 3D, shooting with HDSLRs for video, and much more!
* Highly visual: hundreds of full-color illustrations demonstrate techniques
* Modern: Up-to-date information on current equipment, techniques, and new distribution outlets such as the Web and mobile phones
* Balanced: Production techniques are covered in detail, but ideas and creative problem solving are given equal weight
* A complete resource: Detailed teaching ancillaries are available for instructors
Review
"..arguably the best introductory text available on this subject." -Journal of Educational Television
"Ahh! A readable, accessible, clearly written guide to producing economical video programs for students, industrial and public educators, cable TV producers and hobbyists." --Communicator magazine - USA
"If you were to buy just one video making handbook, this volume should probably rate among the front-runners from which to choose. Put simply, it's excellent in every way." --Video Camera Magazine - Australia
"The reader can discern that the concepts they are reading about are tried and true professional practices—not just something a scholar has dreamt up on his own."--Dr. Joey Goodsell, University of Southern Mississippi
"This is the ideal book for the 21st century." --Dr. Osabuohien P. Amienyi, Arkansas State University
"Jim Owens and Gerald are to be commended on a very thorough explanation of the entire production industry." --Doug Jensen, Vortex Media, USA
Synopsis
Covers not just the "how-to" of video production, but also the "why's" and "why not's."
About the Author
Jim Owens has worked and taught in the video and television industry for over 30 years. He has worked on local, regional and national productions. Owens’ international television work has included eleven Olympic broadcasts and has taken him to over twenty-five countries. He is the author of the Video Production Handbook, Television Production, and Television Sports Production (all published by Focal Press), and has had over thirty articles published in television and broadcast magazines in the United States and Europe. Owens is Dean of the School of Communication Arts at Asbury University in Wilmore, Kentucky, where he has taught since 1981.
Gerald Millerson was an internationally acclaimed author with a long and distinguished career in television with the BBC. He lectured on TV production courses in the US and UK, and his books are referred to as industry bibles.
Table of Contents
Introduction; Chapter 1: An Overview of Video Production; Chapter 2: The Production Crew; Chapter 3: Organizing the Production; Chapter 4: Production Techniques; Chapter 5: Writing for Video; Chapter 6: The Camera; Chapter 7: Using the Camera; Chapter 8: Shooting People & Objects; Chapter 9: Working With the Talent; Chapter 10: Audio for television; Chapter 11: Lighting for Video; Chapter 12: The Background; Chapter 13: Television Graphics; Chapter 14: Recording & viewing the video; Chapter 15: Editing; Chapter 16: Distributing Your Production; Glossary; Index