

You access most operations, such as titles and transitions, from within the Album panel. The workflow in Studio is clear and simple. The timeline offers only a couple of tracks, mainly for title overlays, but Studio 8 isn’t targeted at folks who want to do extensive compositing anyhow. Studio 8’s storyboard is easy to use, but the program also offers a timeline view. In many situations where frame-accurate timing is not necessary, a storyboard view is all you need. Storyboards are a great way to rapidly arrange your movie without worrying about exact timings. Studio encodes video to any format on the fly so you can capture S-video input to DV or MPEG or even capture DV straight to DVD-ready MPEG-2. Studio arranges clips visually in the Album, even though the actual media is in one large file. Option three: capture the whole tape at full quality and let Studio break it up into scenes for you. Second, you could use the fast preview as an off-line editor of sorts, editing using the low-quality preview files and then allowing Studio to capture only what it needs to create the final movie later (also a much touted feature of Final Cut Pro). First, if space is still tight, you might consider capturing a fast preview of the entire tape and then go back and visually select the scenes and takes that you want.


Now that standard hard disks can hold a few hours of DV (one hour = 13 GB), Studio 8 has a number of alternate options.

Typically, this meant that it took a minimum of two hours to get the footage from one DV tape onto your computer. In the waning moments of the last century, hard disk space was at a premium and video editors painstakingly captured only the scenes they needed from tape. Although it is certainly accessible to beginners, the depth of features in this package is impressive and may be all that a home videographer will ever need.Įditing video is a complex task even before you get to the actual editing. This is a complete production package for anyone ready to upgrade their computer for video. The Studio 8 Deluxe version ($300) deserves another look, not just for adding a "1" to the version, but because of added hardware features like analog video/audio inputs and outputs, an extended breakout box and a FireWire port. We liked the $100 Studio 7 software from Pinnacle.
