View Full Version : Footage Links
Steve Gibby December 19th, 2005, 10:59 PM It would be helpful if nature and adventure travel shooters that have footage collections online would post links to their collections. I think some of the best homework is to check out the results of our contemporaries work. Post links to your footage!
That said, I'll put some links up. I shoot tons of adventure travel, nature, POV (helmetcam, etc.), aerials. I've shot in over 60 countries worldwide. I use the F900, Varicam, HVX (soon!), Z1, XL2, DV500, DVX100A, VX2000, and lipstick cams. I have custom water housings for some of my cameras, not for diving, but for shooting watersports on the surface. A lot of my HD and SD stock footage is represented by Mammoth HD online. Here's some links to some of my collections. I have a giant library of footage. Besides these links, you can find more of my footage, and frame grabbed from it, on my web site at: www.cut4.tv
Links:
Cut4 Media Group
Central Coast Stock Footage
Offered online at mammothhd.com
High Definition Collections – 1920x1080 (HD/HDV)
Kite Surfing
http://www.mammothhd.com/XCat/X1186/MHD_C1186.html
Vineyard Vol. 2
http://www.mammothhd.com/XCat/X1184/MHD_C1184.html
California Coast
http://www.mammothhd.com/XCat/X1182/MHD_C1182.html
Sony Z1U HD Demo Reel (Contains several Cut4 Media shots)
http://www.mammothhd.com/MHD_Demo5.html
Standard Definition Collections – 720x480 (DV)
Sharks
http://www.mammothhd.com/XCat/X1181/MHD_C1181.html
Kelp Forest
http://www.mammothhd.com/XCat/X1180/MHD_C1180.html
Beaches: Sunsets, Vol. 1
http://www.mammothhd.com/XCat/X1131/MHD_C1131.html
Beaches: Sunsets, Vol. 2
http://www.mammothhd.com/XCat/X1132/MHD_C1132.html
Coastal Evening
http://www.mammothhd.com/XCat/X1135/MHD_C1135.html
Coastal: Lifestyle Vol. 1
http://www.mammothhd.com/XCat/X1136/MHD_C1136.html
Coastal: Lifestyle Vol. 2
http://www.mammothhd.com/XCat/X1137/MHD_C1137.html
Big Breakers
http://www.mammothhd.com/XCat/X1134/MHD_C1134.html
Beaches: Sea Birds
http://www.mammothhd.com/XCat/X1130/MHD_C1130.html
Beaches: Seals
http://www.mammothhd.com/XCat/X1133/MHD_C1133.html
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Bob Thompson December 20th, 2005, 12:27 AM Steve, a very nice website with a lot of great material-thanks for sharing.
One question, how did you make your web pages and search? I have all my shots logged in excel (20,000 shots) but don't know how to go to the next step of putting them on the web as you have.
Thanks for any advise.
Bob
Steve Gibby December 20th, 2005, 01:08 AM Bob,
Glad you like the web site (s). Are you referring to my own web site (www.cut4.tv), or the web pages on the Mammoth HD web site that house my footage collections? If your question is about Mammoth HD, you might want to ask Clark Dunbar of Mammoth. If you're thinking of stock footage representation, Mammoth is excellent! They represent collections of standard definition and high definition footage.
Contact info:
Email: clark@mammothkd.com
Phone: (303) 670-7973
In answer to your web development question, if you put your footage clips up on your own site you'll want to:
- make sure you have lost of backend server space on your hosting plan
- make sure your web hosting company has servers that can serve up the type of compressed file you want to use (QuickTime, Windows Media, etc)
- find a efficient compression utility. We use Sorensen Squeeze for QuickTime, with real good results
- frame grab representative JPEG frames from each video clip to use a s thumbnails
- if you have a decent budget for web development and have a lot of video clips to post, you might consider using a CGI script to database your inventory
- then simply get MS Front Page, Adobe Go Live, Dreamweaver, or other WYSIWYG software and construct the HTML pages.
- place the thumbnails for each clip on the appropriate page and hyperlink the JPEGS to the appropriate video file on the server
Any web site should satisfy these three functions: 1) be aesthetically pleasing 2) be easy to navigate 3) keep users there for a long time
My Cut4 web site is more advanced than the Mammoth site. My site has a Flash opening movie (logo), then each other page is HTML in frames with a looped Flash movie top left, and a Flash band of rotating JPEG frame grabs across the bottom. All of the video clips are housed on the Demos page.
I've produced the development of a lot of high-end web sites, usually in tandem with video production for clients.
Hope this info helps you!
Steve Gibby December 20th, 2005, 01:10 AM correction on Clak Dunbar's email address.
It's clark@mammothhd.com
Bob Thompson December 20th, 2005, 06:15 AM Thanks Steve for the in depth answer, the mammoth HD site is what I was originally refering to.
As I have everything in excel and I believe that you can paste quicktime clips into excel I was trying to think of some how going this way.
Anyway I will do some more research in it
Thanks
Bob
Meryem Ersoz December 20th, 2005, 08:48 AM excellent footage and a great idea for kicking off the new forum. also, thanks for all the good info.
i'll post this link. it is to a short trailer for my first-ever documentary, which now in retrospect, i can only ever see the flaws in it, so i can't show it anywhere. it's like trying to publish poetry you wrote when you were fifteen. i still like the trailer, though i think of the full-length version as a big sprawling mess that needs re-cut, if i ever find the time. the theme fits this forum nicely:
http://www.ourmedia.org/node/43574
Jim Montgomery December 20th, 2005, 04:49 PM Throw in my little bit of stuff
http://sightseeingfishinggroupproductions.com/index_files/Page350.htm
Meryem Ersoz March 2nd, 2006, 11:04 AM okay, i'm going to try to jump-start this link a bit--send it back to the top. i'd like to see other footage links. more sharing of wildlife footage, please!
i'll throw this one out--i shot this last week:
http://www.ourmedia.org/node/177048
this was shot with a still camera, but to keep it relevant to video, it was shot with a canon 70-200mm lens. i will have some pelican video next week. i'm in love with these amazing birds.
Brendan Marnell March 2nd, 2006, 01:28 PM Lovely detail on the pelican Meryem; worth going to the Yucatan for that alone: Looking forward to more of your bird shots + video.
And thank you for reactivating this link to Steve Gibby's Mammoth shots + video + list of How to prepare for one's Webpage. His shots + clips were beautifully presented. Webpage must cost a packet, Steve. Gave me great pleasure? Is there a mini-version of the Mammoth site? Do they host the operation for a fee? Not that I have any clips to offer yet but it's no longer impossible.
Thank you both for making things a bit clearer.
Brendan Marnell March 4th, 2006, 02:21 PM Hello Steve
Now I'm all wound up by your encouragement please tell me what else my pc requires (at the back end? or up front?) to accommodate a website with facility to show my clips and reduce the audience to tears or worse ... your stuff is too good. Go on, tell me what to get and just trust me to bring down the standard ... it'll make your footage look fantastic, I promise.
Present Computer Components:
1 :AsUs P4P800E DELUXE MOTHERBOARD (iNTEL 865 CHIPSET)
2: INTEL 3.2GIG 800MHZ CPU (INTEL PRESCOTT CHIP)
3:1 GIG (2 X 512MB) PC3200 DDR DIMMS.
4: ASUS N6600GT 128MB GRAPHICS CARD (NYIDIA CHIPSET)
5: SEAGATE 120 GIG SATA HARD DRIVE
6: SEAGATE 250 GIG SATA HARD DRIVE
7: LITE-ON DVD+/- RW BURNER
8: ATX MIDI TOWER WITH 42OWATT P.S.U.
9: PC RUNNING WINDOWS XP-PRO SP2
My cam is a mere Canon XM2 & I'm getting the hang of Premiere Pro 1.5 and Windows Movie Maker. Also got Canopus DV Storm & Edius 2.5, but I don't know why. What version of Quicktime do you recommend?
Help!
Brendan Marnell March 5th, 2006, 05:19 AM I've got some Hi8 originated material which I want to replace. It means a foreign trip which will cost about the same as an FX1. I could do it on DV and accept that I will want to redo it in the not too distant future, but it seems to me the safer route is to do it on HDV and hope it gives me the necessary future proofing. Again it all comes down to your budget and the type of work you're doing. <<< from DV or HDV thread
If I'm guessing correctly then "the type of work" you've done included "The Raptors of Britain & Europe" video guide, which I've been studying to learn raptor identification from plumage and flight detail. I'd be lost without it particularly in distinguishing smaller eagles from buzzards from harriers. Any chance of some more footage Paul? What's your current camcorder?
Steve Gibby March 5th, 2006, 09:22 AM Thanks for the kind words Brendan. It sounds like you’re on the right track. Someone can have the finest footage library on the planet, but if they don’t know how to market their footage, they’ll never make a viable living from their library. If you’re a good shooter, but a poor marketer, nobody will ever see or use your footage. That’s where stock footage firms like Mammoth HD come in. Letting experts in stock footage marketing get your footage to market makes a ton of sense! There are a lot of stock footage firms out there. I’ve found Mammoth HD to be my favorite to represent my collections.
Is there a mini-version of the Mammoth site? Do they host the operation for a fee?
There is no mini-version of the Mammoth HD web site. There is no additional fee for Mammoth to host the operation. See their web site for details. Basically, it works like this: 1) You present your footage collections to them for evaluation 2) If they want to represent you, and market your footage, they confirm that 3) You negotiate and sign the non-exclusive stock footage representation contract 4) You send your footage to them 5) They edit the footage into short collections of clips, and create the JPEGs, info pages, and QuickTime video clips 6) They install the info pages, JPEGs, and QuickTime clips on their web site.
There is generally no additional fee charged by Mammoth HD to edit the footage into JPEGS, QT clips, and info pages. Their fee is simply the non-exclusive, contracted percentage of the funds they raise from the licensing of your footage to their clients.
Hello Steve…please tell me what else my pc requires (at the back end? or up front?) to accommodate a website with facility to show my clips…
Your PC system seems quite capable, but there is no reason to purchase your own “server farm” in order to host a bunch of stock footage clips. I could have easily coded the QT clips myself, hosted them on my server, and uploaded them to my own company web site (www.cut4.tv), but then I’d have to take the time and expense to do the specialty marketing that Mammoth HD does in order to license the footage effectively. Instead, I’ve given up a percentage of the revenue from the licensing of my footage to Mammoth, in exchange for Mammoth doing all the coding, hosting, marketing, and licensing. That frees me up to do what I love best – getting out in the field and shooting footage. Analogy: If you’re hungry for fruit, a slice of watermelon is a lot more fruit than a whole grape!
My cam is a mere Canon XM2 & I'm getting the hang of Premiere Pro 1.5 and Windows Movie Maker. Also got Canopus DV Storm & Edius 2.5, but I don't know why. What version of Quicktime do you recommend?
Good camera skills are good camera skills, whatever camera you’re using. Proverbially, practice makes perfect. Every time you shoot, push yourself to learn new skills and to maximize the performance envelope of the camera. For certain standard definition stock footage acquisition, your Canon will do just fine. Since you’re based in Ireland, and you would probably want to market your stock footage in Europe, your standard definition footage would most likely be 50i and 25p. When you can upgrade to a camera that will also shoot high-definition, the marketability of your stock footage will be much higher. 24p, 25p, and 60i footage, in high definition, should be your target. It can always be effectively “down-rezzed” to standard definition if needed. In answer to your question, we upgrade to each new version of QuickTime and Windows Media as they are released. Our favorite encoding utility is Sorensen Squeeze. It codes QT and WM quite well, and has the added advantage of being able to code Flash Video, which we’re starting to use a lot of.
Cheers
Brendan Marnell March 5th, 2006, 10:40 AM Holy God (as we old folk say here), that's marvellous guidance in several positive directions, Steve. I'll be reading it again and then some. Thank you, a thousand times.
You'd think I have a string of classic clips clamouring for exposure to eager viewers but, since my cat got conjunctivitis from watching all them blurred birds without wearing shades, the world will have to wait a while.
Just thinking that I now know what I have to do gives me confidence. I'll keep practising with XM2 and when I have improved I will go HD. Yes I will. Stand back, stand back an' let the lady see the monkey.
I'm on fire here ...
Paul Doherty March 5th, 2006, 02:46 PM In response to Brendan. Yes the raptor video is mine. A DVD version is in the pipeline, but there's a lot of filming to be done before it's ready.
I've recently migrated to the XL-H1. It's a bit early to post significant comment about the footage, but I will say the viewfinder is really poor.
Apologies for the short reply, but I'm out of the door shortly.
All the Best
Paul
Brendan Marnell March 5th, 2006, 04:42 PM This is my lovely day
This is the day I shall remember
'til the day I'm dying etc any minute now etc
- not Mozart, i know that ...
Now I wonder is there any chance Paul would be interested in putting up some footage, somewhere, anywhere ... fancy me introducing Paul to Steve ... could not have happened without DVInfo, sure .. but 'twas good to be around when they met ...
- not unlike the driving force Haydn shared with Mozart when they met
I am looking forward to your DVD Paul. Will it include some XLH1 clips?
Do tell us when it becomes available ... it could become one of the Wildlife Wonders of the World or at least a prelude thereto ... (is that a possible title that just went by ... mmm .. WWW ... I dont know,
Meryem Ersoz March 7th, 2006, 07:46 PM here's some pelican video. it isn't brilliant, just a bit of vacation video, shot on the fly with the handy-dandy GL2. but pelicans are pretty much the coolest birds ever. they were so much fun to watch. i wish i could have had more time to futz with my camera.
http://ia300033.us.archive.org/3/items/planetEproductionsinc_5/Pelicans.mov
*rant mode on*
the problem with going on trips with other human beings is that they aren't very patient with my video addiction.....
*rant mode off*
oh yes, it's the usual h.264 codec, so you'll need it to view...
also, here is a still photo link to a somewhat rare-ish roseate spoonbill. a very cool bird, indeed! i rather like the composition of this one...
http://www.ourmedia.org/node/178006
Brendan Marnell March 8th, 2006, 08:49 AM Thank you twice again Meryem.
60 secs of video occupied 227mb of download @ 36.9bytes/sec but it was worth the wait. More please, anytime.
When you have time perhaps you'd kindly tell me what's involved in making your footage available? You're encouraging me to think I might have snippets to offer.
The roseate spoonbill was new to me. What a beauty. What poise? Much more than European flamingos. You must have a fair modicum of poise yourself to capture that detail. Did you take the still with your GL2, with or without a tripod?
Meryem Ersoz March 8th, 2006, 09:25 AM sorry about the large file size, brendan. it's kind of ridiculous, for what it is....i didn't realize what a monster i had created until it had uploaded, and i did an experimental online viewing of my own. oops. oh well. it gave me a chance to do the dishes while i waited. i put it up primarily so that my friend who was on the trip with me could view it. we were both charmed by the pelicans. they're amazing birds.
on that trip, i was primarily focusing on obtaining some stills to include in another project. i didn't even realize how amazing the bird photography was going to be in that region. what a bonus. the spoonbill isn't a screen grab, it's an actual photograph, shot with a hand-held canon 70-200mm zoom and a digital rebel XT. what started as a trip to the mayan ruins unexpectedly turned into a birding excursion. taking along the GL2 was a bit of an afterthought. it's hard to resist going someplace new without a video camera.
as far as getting your own stuff online, you should go for it. what are you waiting for?? get an account and do it! get a free one--ourmedia is free, and they have no space restrictions whatsoever. i have a separate website for my biz (which i barely use anyway, it's just something video imagers must have....). but with ourmedia, you can put up as much stuff as you want, without file restrictions. the only thing you agree to is that you're putting it in the public domain, so you relinquish a lot of copyright control. so i don't put up my best video or any of the video i make for clients, just the personal, fun stuff. but just for fun and for experimenting, you can do a lot worse than FREE.
what's also fun about it is, that a lot of the things i've loaded on the site have been downloaded 600-800 times. that's way more exposure (did i mention FREE??) than a film festival, where maybe 100 people see your work in a single screening.
i think google has something similar, and if you do a search on web hosting, you'll find several others. i use ourmedia because it doesn't require a lot of technical skill, there's no fees and no file size restrictions, and, as you can tell, i'm no web guru by any stretch.
one thing i did to get started with web delivery was sign up for a DV Challenge with an eye towards putting pressure on myself to get that web bit figured out. it sounds a bit nutty, but avoiding the wall of shame was highly motivating, and once you get one item up, the others easily follow....
Brendan Marnell March 8th, 2006, 12:08 PM That's a string of happy news and useful information Meryem, bless you.
Any chance you'd put up your copious notes on How not to Slam into or Slither down the Wall of Shame? Guess not, you wouldn't like to be setting a soft precedent for dossers. See you in the timeline, as JR sez.
I've just found DVChallenge Web Video Tips ... so what ...
Dominic Dorigo March 9th, 2006, 10:44 PM With the wide range and volume of footage out there how does the owner of the footage and consumer protect themselves. Landscape footage for example is not exclusive. How do copywrites work with this type of material?
Harikrishnan Ponnurangam March 16th, 2006, 11:45 PM Steve,
I'm interested in the aerial footage of chicago. The only problem is its not close enough for my use. What i'm looking for the traffic on the street to be visible atleast half of the thumbnail size (cars and others vehicles).
Its for 3d purposes. I'm looking footage on HD.
Hari
Mick Jenner March 23rd, 2006, 02:18 AM Here is a link to a couple of low res clips on our web site for you to watch.
Both recorded with Z1 with 1.6 century converter.
http://mppvideos.co.uk/services.htm
Regards
Mick
Lorinda Norton March 26th, 2006, 02:23 AM Thanks, Meryem, for the tip on ourmedia.org. That's pretty slick!
I'd forgotten all about the day last year that I grabbed my XL1s (too bad it had the stock lens on it) and ran outside to catch this Mantis outside my window. Stumbled upon the clip the other day and thought maybe someone who likes bugs might like seeing the little critter. Sorry it's not nice and crisp focus; I was afraid he'd take off!
http://www.ourmedia.org/node/193259
(wmv, 25.1mb--takes several minutes to load)
Meryem Ersoz March 26th, 2006, 10:34 AM at the risk of being accused of shilling for ourmedia--there's other free sites out there, and a search for free web hosts will turn them up. it's just what i, as a self-proclaimed web dummy, use.
it's cool to see more footage posted. nice mantis, lorinda! i love mantises. mantii?
bring on the footage. i love seeing other peoples' outdoor, nature, wildlife images.
Brendan Marnell May 1st, 2006, 04:51 AM .. not to worry, that's going on for some time now ...
The thing is nobody's put up footage on this thread for weeks. I was going to ask would anyone like to see brief clips of raptor footage from time to time. Now I realise I'm too old to be wallowing around for pre-admiration. Anyway I dine healthier on post-criticism .. constructive if you can manage it .. so over the next while I'll be trying to post links on this thread to a few snippets of this & that.
I was impressed by the speed with which a few of the entries on DVChallenge5 downloaded .. I wonder what made the difference? Just to keep viewing/downloading agony to a minimum ..
Jim Montgomery May 1st, 2006, 08:35 AM From a recent trip to Panama
http://sfgmedia.com/video/TheFishing.mov
Not to worry everyone went home just fine, just a little tired from the experience.
Enjoy
Jim
Meryem Ersoz May 2nd, 2006, 11:25 AM but brendan, i see you haven't posted your footage link here, yet! i know they're out there, i've seen them. not everyone who reads the wildlife forum watches the DVC entries, so! where's the link!!
jim, pretty amazing fish. what camera set-up were you using? was that you with the excited running commentary behind the lens? i had to laugh at that, because i have too much outdoor footage with my own voice in the audio, unable to restrain myself with my "whoa"s and "cool"s and heavy breathing from being overly excited by what i'm seeing or overly exerted from carrying too much stuff. or the time i was stung by a bee while i was shooting climbers, and the audio consists of "g-d motherf---" among other things. ah, nature, beautiful nature....
you showed remarkable constraint, by comparison....
Brendan Marnell May 2nd, 2006, 01:37 PM I'm working on the link Meryem, honest, tapping away, trying to remember ...
and determined to embarrass myself into doing better ... and then some
It was the reptilian tattoo on Jim's video that caught my eye; it is all about getting close, isn't it ... bit of an anti-climax though; I was waiting for a slap of a dead fish that never arrived .. and now I'm in danger of lining up a video clip that'll never arrive .. and there's worse to follow
Jim Montgomery May 2nd, 2006, 02:49 PM Meryem
No that was not me. I learned along time ago to stuff one used sock in my mouth and mic someone else. Usually the one who drinks alot.
Brendan
Sorry no dead fish. Those things are what keep my boat running! Got to keep them healthy for the next guy.
Glad you guys enjoyed
Jim
Brendan Marnell May 4th, 2006, 12:37 PM click on http://www.ourmedia.org/node/218085
... that should open relevant page at Ourmedia
... You may get the compressed version to play on that page, but if you're
short of distraction the following procedure will easily drive you there ..
... if you use WMPlayer, right click on Link & Open
... if you use QuickTime, right click on Link & Save target As & Open With
... make a potta tea & a sandwich (turkey, perhaps), have a nap,
... 45 minutes later, you'll have him going around in circles
Thought I had a clean shot to finish but it's a frame or two early
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