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Pause, Recap, Refocus "To Do"

11/7/2014

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Vow to refocus on your Family History Video.  Make and take some time each week to work on it.  Your efforts today will be truly appreciated tomorrow.

  • Write down or record any stories or reminders for your project.

  • Look through old photos or precious storage boxes, cedar boxes, trunks, attics, basements for inspiration.

  • Tuesday is Veteran’s Day so if you are all caught up, find a Veteran to interview.  Let them tell their story. 

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Refocus

11/5/2014

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We’ve paused to recap and refocus on our Family History Video project.  If you’ve stepped away because life got busy, it’s time to step back.  Slowly allow memories to regain a spot in your mind.  Make notes of them to recall later.  Use your smart phone, a camcorder, or a voice recorder, or a simple pad of paper and pencil to save your thoughts. Sketch out your tree as you know it.  Look through photo albums or old trunks for inspiration. 

For my genealogy friends, don’t forget to look beyond the tree to the people.  Write down your impressions of the family members you’ve found.  Why do you think they moved from one place or another?  (If they hadn’t moved, you wouldn’t have any trouble finding them and you probably wouldn’t be interested in genealogy.)  What stories have you learned about them?  What have you learned about yourself while searching your family history?

Imagine if 50, 100 or even 150 years ago, these family members had written their own thoughts and you found them. How would you feel?  I have a precious book from my great-great grandmother.  In 1861, after some kind of loss it seems, she started keeping a journal of sorts – a guest book.  When any of her friends visited her or she visited friends, they wrote in her book.  (See photo – check out the handwriting!)  Here’s a passage:

            Amid the sunshine and shade of this life there is one star that beams benignantly upon our pathway. It is friendship’s star. It cheers us in prosperity and adversity, and opens up in our hearts, a fountain of perpetual love.  When long dead and laid away in the cold, cold grave, how pleasant – mournfully pleasant – it is to read the thoughts and see the names of those who have journed in the rough paths of the world by our side, or even of those to whom we have become endeared by casual or frequent intercourse.  As a shrine for the deposit of these sacred mementoes this Album is dedicated.  May owner and contributors share each others sincerest regard in time, and through grace, in eternity, share the smiles of him in whose “presence there is fullness of joy and at whose right hand there are pleasures for evermore.”

            Southport, N.Y. Feb 2nd, 1862                         Thos. Mitchell

There are pages and pages of dear friends writing kind notes to my GGgrandmother.  I have to assume that she was a kind person to amass such respect and support.  The pages also take me from 1861 to 1889, through New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Kansas where I was born. She was married in 1863, had 4 children between 1866 and 1880. In among the pages I found a note that my great-grandfather, her son, had written explaining his connection to the book, mentioning where he was born (Kansas), his birth date, and even noted the first day he started working for the railroad.

What a gift!  Leave a gift for your great-great grandchildren. Create your own Family History Video.  Helping you do that is what this blog is all about.


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Pause, Recap, Refocus

11/3/2014

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It’s time to pause, recap, and refocus.  It has been 8 weeks!  The first 6 weeks got us gathering and began our digitizing.  Then for 7 weeks we digitized everything we could – even those odd shaped negatives and old 8mm silent films.  This last 8 weeks has focused more on the overall vision and how to realize your video.

Week 16.  We learned why VideoStudio Ultimate X7 by Corel is the ideal software for the genealogist that may never have edited video before.  It is affordable, easy to use, has what you need for a family history video and offers support for free through various sources.

Week 17. We visualized our project.  Each video should have a focus – event (50th wedding anniversary?), one family member, one family unit, one year in time, memorializing a person, or your tree research journey. Imagine being your great-grandchildren who have come across this video. What would you appreciate from 50-75 years ago?  That’s the same kind of thing you want to strive to pass on.

Week 18.  We began learning video editing.  In the first video of our training series, we looked at the software for the first time and got to know how it is set up. (Your Family History Video – Part 1) The second video showed the actual video of Part 1, how to add a title to the people you introduce, how to use the options page, and how to place a graphic. Your Family History Video – Part 2 also showed you how to download free content from Corel.

Week 19. Then we began our own Family History Video.  Part 3 shows how to name your project, adjust the settings, how to add things to your library.  Part 4 shows you how to break your video assets into smaller manageable clips. Then we shared free search tools through www.familysearch.org

Week 20. We started the process of bring it all together – the vision and the assets. Your Family History Video – Part 5 showed how to give your project a name, set the preferences, add an anchor photo and a graphic with a title to begin our video. We talked a bit about the “Ken Burns” effect and suggested you take some time to watch some of The Roosevelts noting how he introduced the people interviewed with names and credentials, how there was a mix of narration, interviews and still photos, and we watched for “era” footage.

Week 21.  We looked first at using the family tree or an image as your anchor.  Your Family History Video – Part 6 shows you how to pan and zoom an overlay track.  Then we made a “pretty” family tree to use throughout our project.

Week 22.  We followed the tree.  We first looked at the importance of the tree and how it can be used.  Then Your Family History Video – Part 7 showed you how to stabilize shaky film, zoom in on an entire clip, and trace the family tree using Corel Painting Creator in VideoStudio Ultimate X7.

Week 23.  We learned about storyboarding.  We learned the difference between storyboarding for theater movies and family history videos. Your Family History Video – Part 8 – Storyboarding shows several tips on how to organize your project.

That brings us up to date! 


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    Treasured Archives

    This blog is to help you gather, capture, digitize and assemble your family history into a video and/or book so we can archive it for you.  That way your great-great-great-great-granchildren can access your stories.

    Monday will get you thinking and set the topic for the week.

    Wednesday will expand or show examples.

    Friday will offer a 'To Do' list or suggestions.

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    01. Get Started!
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    03. Military Service
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    07. Recap And Refocus
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    10. Slides And Negatives
    11. Old Negatives
    12. Reconnecting
    13. Reel To Reel
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    15. Second Recap
    16. Video Software
    17. The Vision
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    21. Bringing It Together
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