For the most part, VHS is the standard.. anywhere you send your VHS, people will be able to view it on their VCR. DVD is slowly coming into the scene as acceptable to send demo reels, but not all companies allow them. Best thing to do is find out what the company you're sending your reel to, is asking for.
In general, VHS is the best way to go. DVD might be ok, but there is no guarantee that whoever is viewing the reel has easy access to a DVD player. Check with whomever you are sending your reel to. Many studios will ONLY look at VHS; some are more flexible.
If you do decide to go with a DVD, make sure it works flawlessly on a variety of set-top boxes. The last thing you want to send out is an unreadable disc. And, unless you're going for a interface designer position, make the menu navigation as simple and as fast as possible. People want to see your animation/modeling reel, not your DVD authoring skills.
Yep... And don't forget the compatibility issues with home made DVDs. The jungle of standars is... hmm... can't even describe it
DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD+R, DVD+RW, DVD-RAM.... it's sick
Best bet would be a real DVD-ROM but that will cost... don't know how much though...
According to statistics on some well-informed website I've seen, DVD-R and DVD+R tend to each work on around 80% of set-top players out there. Some players are better with one than the other.
This is most of the reason that studios don't like DVD submissions.
I personally would create a DV avi and send it out to my camcoder and let it take care of the D/A conversion. Hook it up with my VHS recorder and voila
Well, The Gl1 can be pal or ntsc depending on where you are. The Xl1 model is like the Big brother of the GL1. its like 4 grand here, and the GL1 or GL2, is about 2700. its alot smaller, but still has good video quality and still has frame mode!
Brian
You may not post new threads |
You may not post replies |
You may not post attachments |
You may not edit your posts |
BB code is On |
Smilies are On |
[IMG] code is On |
HTML code is Off