A Few Lessons Learned While Attempting to Publish iPhone 4 Video to DVD
Lesson #1 - Don't Record Video in Portrait Mode
When recording video on the iPhone (and I'm guessing on any phone or small form-factor video camera for that matter), use landscape mode (with the big side going left to right). Now I usually shoot photos in portrait mode and it's real easy to flip the orientation of a photo by right-clicking on the photo in Windows Explorer and choosing Rotate Clockwise. Well with videos--guess what--this isn't so easy. Plus if you plan on watching the video on a television, portrait videos will look lousy, even after flipping it.
Lesson #2 -- How to Flip a Video
So if you happen to record a video the wrong way (see lesson #1), you will need to flip it unless you want to rotate your head sideways while watching it. Now you'd think this was pretty simple, but it's not. I guess the video editor needs to literally flip every frame of the video and then you need to re-save the flipped video.I tried flipping the video using 4 different pieces of software:
- Camtasia doesn't flip videos.
- Microsoft's free Windows Live Movie Maker will do the job but it takes forever and then I didn't like the results. http://explore.live.com/windows-live-movie-maker
- I downloaded some free video editing DVD Video Software Free Studio from http://www.dvdvideosoft.com/. This software feels cheap but appears to be spyware free. Regardless, the quality of the video was terrible when it was done.
- ArcSoft MediaImpression, a version of which came for free with my Kodak camera, did the job and did it well (and faster than Windows Live Movie Maker). http://www.arcsoft.com/en-us/software_title.asp?ProductCode=AMI3
Lesson #3 -- How to Create a DVD That Will Play in a Television DVD Player
Okay, like I said I don't know much about producing videos. Here's what I found out in this regard:
- While Camtasia has a great video editor, Camtasia wasn't of much help here because while it does a nice job producing videos for uploading or playing on a computer it doesn't create DVDs that play in a DVD player for televisons. OTOH, if you need to upload your video, Camtasia is a great product.
- I didn't even try using the DVD Video Software Free Studio product since I was so unhappy with the quality of it's video flipping.
- ArcSoft MediaImpression should be able to do the production but the Kodak Version (version 2.0) couldn't seem to locate my laptop's DVD burner which rendered the Produce DVD feature useless.
- This time, Windows Live Movie Maker shined. It had no problem creating titles and transitions (which were also possible using Camtasia and MediaImpression) but most importantly it could burn a DVD with menus that I could then pop in my DVD player and play on the television.
So I was able to produce the final (flipped) video and all was well except that the above still can't fix the fact that I recorded the video in portait mode. Oh well, lesson learned...