Wednesday, December 14, 2005
A Cautionary Tale to All Videographers
Posted by Jason Dunn in "THOUGHT" @ 09:00 AM
When I'm doing a job or favour for someone, I tend to take it pretty seriously. So when two friends of mine were getting married, and they asked me to videotape it with my Canon GL2, I went about the business of getting it ready and making sure it was working properly. I dropped $600 on a fluid head video tripod and busted out some brand new miniDV tapes. The night before the wedding at the rehearsal I tested my setup with an old miniDV tape to make sure everything was solid. It was. The next day I got set up for the wedding, opened up a brand new Maxell miniDV tape, and started shooting the event. I put the camera in LP mode to get 90 minutes in case the ceremony ran over 60 minutes. After the ceremony (which was about 45 minutes) I continued by shooting the reception line, some shots outside the church, then some video of the wedding photos at a local park. I switched tapes for the reception and captured another 45 minutes or so.
The next weekend I sat down to edit it - I was eager because I had some ideas I wanted to try with the video. It had been a while since I had a "serious" video project, so I was eager to use some of the new techniques and tools I now had at my disposal. Philip send me over the Digital Juice Wedding Editors Toolkit, and once I finally grasped how it worked I was very excited about using it.
Figure 1: A screenshot from the video
Once the video was transferred from my camera, I opened it up and started watching to see how it turned out - and my heart fell out of my chest and rolled around on the floor twitching once I saw what was on the tape. Here's what over 75% of the video from the first tape looks like. You don't have to look all that closely at the screenshot above to see the problem - blocks of the picture are missing, or moved to the left or right. It comes and goes every few seconds, but there are large portions of the video where the distortion happens in constant waves, making it almost unwatchable. I had a full 90 minutes of video like this. The latter 45 minutes was stuff I'd edit the hell out of anyway, but the ceremony in the first 45 minutes would be almost unedited.
My brain was churning. What was the problem? Media or source? Is my $3000 camera defective at playback, or was the tape bad? The Firewire cable? The Firewire port? Either way I'd be upset, but cameras can be replaced - wedding video footage cannot. I looked at the footage captured from the second tape, and it seemed to be fine. That didn't bode well. Sure enough, when I borrowed another miniDV camera and did a test capture from the first tape, the results were the same. I tried changing settings, the Firewire cable I was using, even the computer itself in case the Firewire port on the laptop was bad. Everything led me back to the same result: the brand new tape I used to capture the video on was defective.
I was stunned - it never occurred to me that a miniDV tape would be defective in that way. Media can be bad - I've had blank CDs and DVDs that would refuse to burn, but a miniDV tape? The answer, and the lesson I learned, is obvious: miniDV tapes can be defective, just like any other blank media, and if you want to be sure what you're capturing is coming out properly, you need to test the media. Hard to do with CDs and DVDs, but easy enough to to with miniDV tapes. The next time I shoot an event, you can be sure I'm going to take some test shots with the tape, rewind it, and watch for problems.
The couple in question was very gracious about the problem because they knew it wasn't my fault, but I still feel like I failed them - all this marvellous technology, and the whole thing was undone by a $2 miniDV tape. Test your tapes before using them, and avoid seeing yourself in the same situation.
UPDATE: Over the months since I'd written this, with the help of some community members, I was able to rescue the footage and end up with exactly what I wanted. The solution was a combination of packing the tape and trying a new head cleaner. Read the discussion thread to learn more if you happen to find yourself in the same situation. Needless to say, I'm thrilled!
Jason Dunn owns and operates Thoughts Media Inc., a company dedicated to creating the best in online communities. He enjoys mobile devices, digital media content creation/editing, and pretty much all technology. He lives in Alberta, Canada.