transcribing from video
Shane Gilchrist O hEorpa
shane.gilchrist.oheorpa at GMAIL.COM
Mon Jan 1 16:20:04 UTC 2007
Kim,
u ll have to use your memory to develop a 'mind-mapping' technique
can be annoyed at first - its the same with subtitle makers - they
have to go thru stuff over and over to get the words in right.
Shane
On 01/01/07, James Shepard-Kegl, Esq. <kegl at maine.rr.com> wrote:
>
> Kimberley,
>
> Imagine Gutenburg creating a page block by block -- very time consuming.
> But once done, thousands (or today, millions) of copies can be made in short
> order.
>
> Two words of advice:
> 1) If you don't sign, get a signer to assist you. (You would not want to
> confuse an involuntary twitch with a grammatical marker.)
> 2) The process becomes easier with practice (and a decent glossary file).
> But, it is still labor intensive, so plan your time accordingly.
>
> -- James
>
>
> on 1/1/07 12:53 AM, Kimberley Shaw at skifoot at gmail.com wrote:
>
>
> Hello all:
> and a very happy New Year to you all!
> Val, I only get more and more impressed by the day by the things you have
> done! I have been trying to transcribe a poem of Ella Mae Lentz ("Travels
> with Malz"), and it has become an exercise in frustration.As an ASL student
> who has just been placed into a 2nd-year ASL class at a univiersity level, I
> am trying to figure out why it is being so diffficult to simply write down
> sentence by sentence from the VHS (no, the video her poem is on has never
> been released to DVD, alas), and I am wondering how on earth you were able
> to transcribe from video when you were not yet a signer.
> Was it the dance training?
> Have all of you other signwriters got some special wisdom to share with me?
> Or just useful tips?
> You don't even want to know how many times I have had to hit "pause" and
> "rewind" just to get the first sentence down on paper.
> All the best,
> Kim from Boston
>
>
>
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