If you connect the camcorder to a HDMI converter into a 4K recorder and record it tapeless, it'll look a lot more cinematic and more HQ. I've been using this method for almost 2 years now and it's shockingly really good tapeless in RAW format.
@@ZacktheFilm You can! I use my assassin for it and it works fine, just make sure to get the Ablewe brand of HDMI converters, the other brands tend to have issues
@@ZacktheFilm I actually learned this technique from Tyler MacIntyre (The guy who directed The Gawkers from V/H/S 99) so thanks to him for teaching me this method, their short was filmed on a TRV940 HI8 camera with a ninja v!
i've been thinking of picking up a hi-8 camera for my youtube videos. Would you suggest getting started with tape or the analog to digital converter setups?
Awesome results. I’m using the old tech too… filming all of my new shorts for RU-vid with a 16 year old Sony F900. I love it. Such a liberating experience and just so simple and easy to work with.
Funny how I thought “maybe I won’t shoot film, I’ll shoot tape so it’s cheaper and it’s sort of unique in today’s landscape” ALL OF A SUDDEN this video comes out lmao. Also, nice typewriter. I have the exact same one… are we telepathically connected?
I just bought one off of eBay. I bought it for nostalgia reasons. Brings me back to when my dad would video me and my sister as a kid. I want that feeling with my kids.
I just bought a sony handycam.low budget films from the 70-early 2000s are my inspiration and i wanted a digital camera to give me that retro feel at first i wanted to shoot on a super 8 film but starting out that way would be difficult for a beginner so i choose the camcord route and this video help alot now im confident in the camera i got and cant wait to shoot with it
I'm using the S-video port connected to a dedicated capture card to get my images. If there's a better way to process the clips I'm open to hearing about it.
The Clearclick 2.0 AV converter. It’s worth mentioning I add a lot of effects to the final clip such as film emulation which is probably why it looks different from what you’re expecting.
@@ZacktheFilm That's the issue. Those converters are sadly very bad at their only job, digitizing. You should give devices like the GV-USB2 or older PCI(e) TV cards with analog inputs a try. It'll improve your video quality significantly.
You can improve Hi-8 by a huge margin by skipping tape and grabbing video off the svideo out. Use a ::powered:: svideo/rca to hdmi converter box - those will clean up the signal and set it to IRE 7.5 (the rca to usb dongles are crap now, don’t use them) A cheap HDMI to USB 2.0 dongle will capture perfectly. I like to record to ProRes HQ 8bit. When brought into your editor, set it as you would to comply with SD NTSC standards (black gamma level raised to 15.9, highlights rolled off around 235). Recording to tape on Hi-8 throws out a TON of luma data you’ll want to keep during grade and matching.
hello, can you clarify some information for me on this topic? I use of of these av clear click capture cards and what I love it how they save and separate each recording as separate clips on my usb drive. Using the method you described I would have to manually record the played back footage via OBS or something correct? Or is there any sort of a video to hdmi capture device that can make use of the analog sources and still retain the separate clip functionality?
I haven't tried MiniDV myself, but I'd like to! I will say I like the analog artifacts from the Hi8. I'm not sure if I would see as much of that on DV.
@@ZacktheFilm you might not as much if you use the firewire connection, however you'd probably get the analoge noise with inproved color/dynamic range when capturing through the av out.
@@clumpyschlipz7571 MINI DV is nice but dealing with a smaller physical tape, they are not as reliable. still I tend to prefer it. look into the TVR900 mini dv camera, it has setting options for eveything youd find on a modern digital cam.