I do video editing for a local wrestling company. And I have been wanting to put their company logo in the bottom corner of the show, but I don't know how. I am using NeroVisionExpress to edit. Is there anyway I can do that edit with that program?
+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 12 of 12
-
-
Welcome to the forums.
https://forum.videohelp.com/viewtopic.php?t=248307
It doesn't use NeroVisionExpress, but (I believe) it uses free tools.There is some corner of a foreign field that is forever England: Telstra Stadium, Sydney, 22/11/2003.
Carpe diem.
If you're not living on the edge, you're taking up too much room. -
Thanks for the welcome. I have been using the site for awhile now and decided to join.
I guess I should have searched before hand. Sorry. I just didn't know what to search for. -
Originally Posted by CombackKid
A good way is to have a read of anything interesting that catches your eye in the list of "Latest active forum topics" on the right side of the home page.There is some corner of a foreign field that is forever England: Telstra Stadium, Sydney, 22/11/2003.
Carpe diem.
If you're not living on the edge, you're taking up too much room. -
If you source video is DV and you have Windows XP, you can achieve this in realtime - during the capture process - with our Enosoft DV Processor. One of its functions is logo insertion. It supports BMP, JPG, GIF and PNG images (with full alpha channel support).
If necessary - and if you have two DV devices - you can insert the logo onto a live DV stream without even having to capture to disk.
Our program is in beta and so free to use - though we have supplied a version to a satellite TV distribution company for a couple of music channels that broadcast to North America expressly for live logo insertion (station branding).John Miller -
Is there a difference between realtime and the program on the guide that daamon recommended?
-
Yes.
Let's say you have a 30 minute video on DV and you want to add a logo/watermark to the whole thing. Traditionally, you will transfer the video to PC (30 minutes), use an editor of some sort to add the graphic (variable amount of time depending on PC) and then send the modified video back to tape (30 minutes). So it will take at least 60 minutes + the rendering time.
Using our realtime capability, if you have two DV devices, you simply play the source tape on one of them, pass it through the software, and record the processed result - it takes however long the video lasts - in the above example, 30 minutes.
If you already have the edited video on disk, you can just run the AVI file to the DV device via our software, adding the logo on the fly. The advantage here is that you can have just one version of the editing program and create watermarked and non-watermarked versions at the time you send the video back to a DV device.
You can also capture the video from the DV device and add the logo as it is capturing. Then, if you only need to make simple cuts to the video, it will be a lot quicker, too. This also helps if your final destination is not DV (e.g., DVD).John Miller -
@ CombackKid:
If the Enosoft DV Processor does what it says on the tin (and I don't doubt it) then it'll be quicker and less hassle - providing the output quality is as good (or very close to) the input quality. Again, I don't doubt that it will be.
@ JohnnyMalaria: Can you use a DV AVI file as the source and save to HDD?There is some corner of a foreign field that is forever England: Telstra Stadium, Sydney, 22/11/2003.
Carpe diem.
If you're not living on the edge, you're taking up too much room. -
Originally Posted by daamon
The software can operate in a number of modes:
AVI to AVI
DV device to AVI
AVI to DV device
DV device to DV device
I'll post a before and after frame onto our website so you can compare. (All the processing is done in the YUV color space and, where possible, without even leaving the DCT domain. Only the portions of the video frame that need to change are recompressed).John Miller -
OK - here are links to some images.
Original - single DV frame captured from tape
Semitransparent - DV frame after inserting logo (semitransparent mode)
Opaque - DV frame after inserting logo (opaque mode)
Note: The three video images are taken from DV streams decoded using the standard Microsoft DV decoder and saved using JPEG compression at a factor of 10 (Paintshop Pro).John Miller -
@ JohnnyMalaria: I know the JPEGs on a web page aren't a true reflection of the DV frame, but I gotta say that the "before" and two "afters" look incredibly alike, if not identical (as far as the human eye can see at least).
Nice work!
@ CombackKid: I'd say to read the guide so you get a feel for what's going on (the theory) but use the Enosoft DV Processor to actually do the work.There is some corner of a foreign field that is forever England: Telstra Stadium, Sydney, 22/11/2003.
Carpe diem.
If you're not living on the edge, you're taking up too much room. -
Originally Posted by CombackKid
If you just had it briefly after every commercial break, I wouldn't complain. But having a large blot on the screen distracting from the actual show all the time (even worse: animated logos!) is verging on vandalism. (Eg, see the "Safari" examples above.)
If you just want to "watermark" the video, a subtle, small, alpha-blended logo isn't too annoying, and effectively brands your video for anyone who actually cares about that.
Similar Threads
-
Video streaming Online graphic
By prissen in forum Video Streaming DownloadingReplies: 0Last Post: 17th Jan 2012, 06:12 -
Does Graphic Card Makes any Difference in Video Conversion?
By farzad in forum Video ConversionReplies: 2Last Post: 1st Jan 2012, 18:20 -
Video Graphic Error-- Unsure of the Cause
By Blue_Leader in forum Newbie / General discussionsReplies: 0Last Post: 10th Dec 2009, 17:15 -
How to add animation graphic to video ?
By AAC in forum Newbie / General discussionsReplies: 0Last Post: 20th Jun 2008, 18:50 -
need info about sli graphic cards and video editing
By JerryB in forum ComputerReplies: 6Last Post: 9th Jan 2008, 21:14