After we
finished our filming we then had to edit our opening sequence together. We
started off with capturing the footage that we had recorded onto Adobe Premier.
It was here we had a problem, due to time and hardware constraints we chose to
go against using a logging rush to capture our footage off the camera. Instead
of just capturing the scenes we needed we went and captured all of the footage
on the camera. This ended up turning out to be a positive as it allowed us to
keep extra footage so we could add onto extra parts to scenes to give them that
little push they were missing.

The next
thing we had to do after this was to cut down the scenes to the individual
shots. This is so that we can put it into the correct order and cut them down
so that they were well paced. To do this we used the razor tool, selecting it
with either C or by clicking on the razor icon. After we separated them we then
got them all in order and placed them over 2 channels. This was so that if we
accidental crossover shots they wouldn't be cut down.

The next
challenge we faced was creating the split screen shots. To get this
effect we started off by layering the 2 videos on top of each other so
that they were running at the same time. We then clicked on the picture that was
on top and went over to the effect controls of the video and selected
the motion option. From here I then selected scale and lowered it to
50%, we then went to the position controls and placed it so that it was in the
corner of the frame. To set the other picture I did the same but just
moved it to the other corner of the frame.

One problem
that we uncounted during editing was that for some of the shots inside the
garage the lighting was very dim, to the point where you couldn't make out the
actors faces. To get around this we used a combination of lighting effects and
colour correction. We started off by using colour correction to brighten the
picture up a bit. To do this we went to Video Effects>Colour
Correction>Brightness and Contrast and then dragged the effect onto the
video that we wanted to change. To change the brightness we then had to go into
the video effects and play around with the numbers until the video looks better
than it did before. The second thing we did was use a lighting effect to shed
more artificial light in the scene. This was done in a very similar way to the
brightness and contrast effect.

When we were done we then had to export the
video as an AVI file so it could be uploaded to Youtube. To do this we simply
went to File then Export, chose the file destination and then waited for it to
finish.
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