Posts filed in topic ‘Images, film, video’.

Posts about visual media — especially those we can make ourselves, such as digital photographs or video clips on a mobile phone.

BBC iPlayer & TV online.

Cartoon frog holds laptop computer showing BBC iPlayer logo.

Workshop: 22 March 2010 (2.30 – 5 pm).

We will show you how to install and use BBC iPlayer, which lets you download most BBC TV programs to your own computer, then watch them for up to 30 days, without a TV licence.

BBC iPlayer links.

Other TV online services.

We will also look at some of the other Web TV services which provide Internet streaming access to TV programs and films, for example:

Please bring your own questions to the workshop.

ACC members can reserve places at this workshop by sending an email to acc@lawns.org.uk (if you don’t trust your own email skills, please ask for help).

Free screenings of ‘Home’ for over-60s.

Rio Cinema logo.

A message from Jemma Buckley, Rio Cinema

Hackney Home Movies.

An opportunity to see this special programme of films from the Hackney Archive, which also includes new footage collected during the Rio’s recent ‘Home Movies’ project. The original screening of this programme took place in January to a packed house. Now the Rio is offering three opportunities for the over-60s to see this material for free!

Part of a series of events to mark the Rio’s landmark 100th anniversary, this screening features footage of Hackney landmarks throughout the last century, enabling us all to relive the borough’s rich and vibrant history on the big screen.

Plus – free tea and biscuits!

Screening Dates.

  • Wednesday 17 March 2010: 11 am.
  • Wednesday 24 March 2010: 11 am.
  • Wednesday 5 May 2010: 11 am.

Doors open at 10.15 am.

For more information please call Jemma on 020 7241 9419 or email jemma@riocinema.org.uk .

Managing digital photographs.

Cartoon frog points a camera at you.

Workshop: 1 March 2010 (2.30 – 5 pm).

At this workshop we will look at some of the things you might want to do after you have taken your digital photographs. This will not be a workshop about how to use your camera, or about photographic techniques.

Here are some questions we anticipate …

  • How to transfer digital photographs from a camera to a computer hard disk or to a flash drive.
  • How to see what the photographs look like.
  • How to manage and organise thousands of digital photographs.
  • How to backup and preserve important photographs.
  • How to convert photographs to a format and size suitable for email and web sites.

Please bring your own questions to the workshop.

ACC members can reserve places on these workshops by sending an email to acc@lawns.org.uk (if you don’t trust your own email skills, please ask for help).

Note added 23 February: this workshop seems to be almost fully booked — perhaps one or two places available.

Virtual Revolution (BBC).

The Virtual Revolution is a BBC TV series about how the World Wide Web is reshaping our lives.

Click on the triangular ‘play’ button to start the video.

Handling digital images.

Screenshot of a photograph displayed in Irfanview.

Workshop: 8 February 2010 (2.30 – 5 pm).

At this workshop, we will show you how to use Irfanview — the default image editor and viewer at the Agewell Computer Club (that means it is on all our computers, and easy to find if you are logged in as ‘agewell’).

About Irfanview …

  • It’s free (for personal and educational use), highly-regarded, has been around for years, and has a large user base.
  • It’s used for viewing digital images, and performing basic image editing tasks such as cropping, rotating and resizing — all of which it does very well.
  • You can download it and install it on your own computer at home.
  • There is a ‘portable’ version which you can put on your flash drive.
  • It has a simple interface to scanners — you can scan directly into Irfanview.

Things we would like to do.

  • Help you understand digital image file formats.
  • Show you how to use Irfanview on our computers at The Lawns.
  • Show you how to download Irfanview from irfanview.com, and install it yourself.
  • Help you install Irfanview on a flash drive (don’t forget to bring a flash drive if you want to do this).
  • Show you how to scan new images from our scanners directly into Irfanview.
  • Show you how to process photographs to make them suitable for email and World Wide Web sites such as Facebook and Internet dating sites.
  • Demonstrate Picasa — a free Google program for organising and editing images, and a good choice for anyone who has a lot of digital photographs to manage.

Things we might not do.

  • Discuss email attachments — that it is one of the topics of the 15 February workshop.
  • Discuss how to transfer digital photographs from your camera to a computer or other storage media — that it is one of the topics of the 1 March workshop.

‘Screenings of Home’ – Rio Anniversary.

Rio Cinema logo.

A message from Jemma Buckley, Rio Cinema

Thanks to grants from Film London and the Goldsmiths’ Company, the Rio is beginning a series of events to mark their landmark 100th anniversary celebration with a special screening of films from the Hackney Archives.

The event will also feature new footage discovered during the Rio’s recent ‘Home Movies’ project. The films are a rich source of memories, featuring footage of Hackney landmarks throughout the last century, enabling us all to relive Hackney’s vibrant history on the big screen.

  • Saturday 30 January 2010, 1.30 pm.
  • Tickets: £4 (£3 Concessions & Rio Friends).

To book tickets, or for more information, please contact: Rio Cinema, 107 Kingsland High Street, Dalston, E8 2PB / 020 7241 9410 .

Call for dancers over the age of 50!

East London Dance logo.

A message from Emma Kerr, East London Dance

Would you like to be in a dance film? Are you aged 50 or over?

East London Dance is making a short dance film about the heritage and people of Dalston and we are looking for dancers aged 50 or over.

We are running a workshop at The Sharp End (11 Richmond Road, Dalston, E8 3HY) on Monday 25 January 2010, 12.15 – 1.45 pm.

You will meet artistic director for the project Colin Poole, and film maker Dean Stewart and try out some ideas.

To be involved you must available during the week of Monday 8 February when filming will take place. All filming will be done on sites around Dalston during that one week.

See you there!

If you have any questions please don’t hesitate to contact Emma Kerr, Creative Projects Manager on emma@eastlondondance.org or 020 8279 1052.

What’s Your Story? Made in Hackney.

Documentary Filmmakers Group logo.

Make your own short documentary film.

When you look at old photos from a hundred years ago, do you want to know more? Why are they dressed like that? What were they doing before the picture was taken?

‘What’s Your Story’ is a way for older people to pass on their stories. Professional filmmakers will teach you how to use a video camera and make a short film about your story or someone else’s. The course will take place January to March 2010.

DFG (The Documentary Filmmakers Group), the leading training provider for professional documentary filmmakers in the UK, is supported by the Transformation Fund to offer training on this special pilot project. Similar DFG courses cost £1000.

Sessions will run for four hours a week on a Monday morning in Dalston. Fifteen participants will be chosen to learn filmmaking skills and to produce a video art work.

To find out more about how to apply, come and meet us at:

  • Made In Hackney,
    Screening of New Short Documentary Films.
  • Saturday 28 November 2009, 1 – 3.30 pm.
  • Hackney Museum (Ground Floor),
    1 Reading Lane,
    E8 1GQ .
  • Light refreshments will be served.

This is the first public screening of the best of DFG graduates’ short documentary films about Dalston people including:

  • Anthony – Street Cleaner and Philosopher.
  • The Grave Digger’s Story.
  • And several films about Ridley Road market stall holders.

To find out more details about this event and book your place, please email amber@dfgdocs.com , or phone Amber on 020 7249 6600.

Video Hackney Walk.

Snapboard animation clip art.

This event will start Tuesday 22 September 2009 (2.30 pm), meeting at The Lawns.

Have you ever wondered how to use the video functions on your mobile phone or digital camera?

This will be a really good way to learn how — artist Larisa Blazic and Emma Jones from Hackney Co-operative Developments will lead the group around the most interesting places nearby — and help you make short (typically 1 to 2 minutes) videos of what you see.

After the walk, your videos can be added to Larisa’s unique project that records and documents the ways in which people see the world around them. Larisa has been working with local community groups to capture images of Dalston and share them through a new website that acts as a collaborative, living archive curated by local residents like yourself. Later this year the videos will be displayed on a huge screen in Gillett Square.

Back at The Lawns, we will show you how to transfer your videos to a computer, and then upload them to a website.

You don’t need to book for this event — just come to The Lawns on Tuesday a little before 2.30 pm — and please remember to bring your phone or camera.

Call for home movies!

Rio Cinema logo.

The Rio, Hackney’s last remaining cinema, is celebrating its 100th anniversary with an ambitious new community project that will make archive film more accessible to local audiences.

As part of the project, the Rio is especially interested in any home movies local residents may have hidden away. These films are a rich source of memories, and key to unlocking and accessing our pasts.

Towards the end of the year the Rio will be hosting a special ‘Home Movie’ screening day, where residents will have the opportunity to bring along their film reels and view them on screen. Furthermore, the Rio is able to digitise this material — so it can be played and enjoyed again and again at home on DVD.

If you have any old film footage at home, or would just like to know more about the project, please contact Jemma at the Rio …

  • Email: jemma@riocinema.org.uk .
  • Phone: 020 7241 9419 .

Rio website: http://www.riocinema.ision.co.uk/ .

A Day of Exploration, Wed 5 August 2009.

Photo of the wall of a half-demolished building, seen through a wire fence.

Do you want to be part of an art project that documents Dalston during this period of change?

Join artist Larisa Blazic and add your view to Mezzo Moderno, Mezzo Distrutto (Half Modern, Half Destroyed), a unique project that uses mobile and digital technologies to record and document the ways in which people view and interpret their built environment. Larisa has been working with local community groups to capture images of Dalston and share them through a new website that acts as a collaborative, living archive curated by local residents. Larisa invites you to take part in this project and, as she looks at the area, share your thoughts and ideas with some of the residents of Dalston. Bring your camera or mobile phone to capture your views and record of the area, then upload your work to the project’s website and see it evolve into a unique portrait of a diverse and characterful area.

Project Events on Wednesday 5 August 2009.

Walk with us.

Larisa will be leading two walks around the area on Wednesday 5 August 2009 starting at 2.30 pm and 4.00 pm.

Meeting place for both walks is The Ochre Works Café, Gillett Square, N16 8JN (underneath the Vortex Jazz Club). Bring your camera or mobile phone.

N16 8JN Googlemap / N16 8JN Streetmap.

Talk with us.

Larisa and software programmer Startx will be presenting and explaining the project, the website and the software behind it at a special presentation at Studio 5,  Arcola Theatre, Arcola Road, E8 2DJ, at 6.00 pm.

For further information please contact Emma Jones, Arts & Events Development Manager for Gillett Squared (phone: 020 7993 3644, email: emmajones@hced.co.uk).

Website of the Week, 6 July 2009 : YouTube.

Screen shot of YouTube website.

YouTube.

YouTube is a ‘video sharing’ website — a place where anyone can place short videos that they have made themselves, to be watched by anyone else. It started in 2005, and is now huge (more than 6 billion videos viewed in January 2009). The best way to find something that might interest you is to use the site Search engine (at the top of each YouTube page).

URL: http://www.youtube.com/ .

Hackney History Video – What’s Your Story?

Documentary Filmmakers Group logo.

A message from Deborah Kingsland, Documentary Filmmakers Group

What’s Your Story?

If you could speak to Hackney residents of 1909, what would you like to know about their lives? What was really ordinary to them but is now completely strange to us? We can’t have that conversation but we now have the technology so you will be able speak to the residents of Hackney in 2109. So what will they want to know? How did you come to be in London? What was life like in the country of your birth? What’s your family history? Do you have memories from the ’30s or the War? What memories, or thoughts would like to share with future generations? Do you remember the way Hackney used to be?

Would you like to record a message for posterity on this or other subjects? Or would you like to learn basic video camera, interviewing, editing skills and uploading skills from professionals? ’What’s Your Story?’ will also include an intergenerational element, so you can choose to interview or be interviewed by young people from the area.

If you are interested to learn more about What’s Your Story? and offer suggestions on how it should operate, come and meet Deborah Kingsland from DFG next Monday afternoon, 6 July 2009, 2.30 pm at the Lawns.

What is DFG?

Based in Dalston Kingsland, the Documentary Filmmakers Group is the leading provider of training for the TV industry.

DFG also runs special projects e.g. Last month, we completed ISIS, a training and production programme for women to make human rights films — http://thedfg.org/courses/page/271/isis.

Deborah will be at the Agewell Computer Club next Monday 6 July (from 2.30 pm) to discuss her ideas and how we might participate.

Irfanview, images and email attachments.

Screenshot of a photograph displayed in Irfanview.

Workshop: Monday 6 July 2009 (10.30 am – 1.00 pm).

Irfanview is a highly-regarded free program for viewing digital images, and performing basic image editing tasks such as cropping, rotating and resizing. It is the default image editor for the Monday afternoon Agewell Computer Club. Email attachments seem to be a perennial source of frustration. At this workshop we will try to get you started as an Irfanview user, and help you understand how to handle images — including preparing them for email.

Things we might do:

  • Show you how to use Irfanview on our computers at The Lawns.
  • Show you how to download Irfanview from irfanview.com, and install it yourself.
  • Help you install Irfanview on a flash drive (don’t forget to bring a flash drive if you want to do this).
  • Show you how to scan new images from our scanners directly into Irfanview.
  • Show you how to process digital camera photographs to make them suitable for email and World Wide Web sites such as Facebook and Internet dating sites.
  • Help you attach images (and other files) to your email.

By the way:

  • Monday mornings are for special workshops and events only — there is no general drop-in.
  • The Lawns will close at 1 pm, and re-open later for the Agewell Computer Club.

Double workshop Monday 15 June 2009.

Digital camera clip art.At the next Agewell Computer Club (Monday 15 June, 2 – 4.30 pm) we will have two workshops in one session.

a) How to upload files to a server.

Practical help in uploading files — for example, sending digital photographs, video clips, documents — from a computer, mobile phone or digital camera to the World Wide Web.

Why?

Because it is something we need to do often. It’s what we do when we attach a photo or a document to an email, if we want to upload photographs to photo-sharing sites like Flickr or TinyPic, or to Facebook, or one of the many Internet dating sites.

Uploading a file is a key World Wide Web skill — and it is really quite easy, yet many people believe it is something highly technical. In fact, we only need two items of information — the name of the file and where it is. If you know that, there is not much else to do. So at the workshop, we will try to crack this persistent problem.

Also, because it fits in precisely with the project we have started doing with Hackney Co-operative Developments. Participants in the project (‘Mezzo Moderno, Mezzo Distrutto’) will be uploading short video clips to a special website (code name: Dalston YouTube). We need to prove to them that the uploading is easy. People not involved in the project will also learn something very useful. The second workshop (see below) will be help and advice on using the video capabality of you mobile phone or digital camera.

What to bring to the workshop.

Mainly yourself.

If you would like help with uploading directly from your mobile phone or digital camera, please bring it — and all the cables that came with it in the box. If you need help uploading from a flash drive or CD, bring those too.

But you don’t have to bring your own files to join the workshop. We have plenty of practice files for you to work with.

Where will we upload to?

We have set up a temporary file upload area on this web site — a place where you can upload any file, and then see for yourself that it has been uploaded. If you have digital photographs of your own, we can get you started with TinyPic (it looks simple, it’s free and you don’t have to register to use it).
Snapboard animation clip art.

b) How to use the video functions of your mobile phone or digital camera.

Most digital cameras, and possibly most mobile phones too, can make short video clips. It’s not difficult to make a short video like this — but very few people know how to do it properly.

If you would like help on making an interesting video with the very simple controls on your camera or phone, this workshop is for you.

Larisa Blazic and Emma Jones (from Hackney Co-operative Developments in Gillett Square) will be here to help us get started.

We hope participants will be inspired to join in Larisa’s ‘Mezzo Moderno, Mezzo Distrutto’ project — recording this area as we see it.

Capturing Olympic memories – the VAULT Project.

East End Film Festival logo.A message from Jo Seagar, Olympic Youth Project …

Aspiring filmmakers are calling on Londoners with memories of the 1948 Olympics to come forward and take part in a series of short documentaries.

We are looking for people who remember the excitement of the 1948 London games; people who remember the atmosphere, the state of London and of course all the different sporting achievements and are willing to share their stories. We would be especially interested in speaking to anyone who was actively involved in the 1948 Olympic Games.

To find out more, or to get yourself or anyone you might know involved, contact East End Film Festival Director, Alison Poltock

  • Email: alison.poltock@towerhamlets.gov.uk .
  • Phone: 020 7364 7903 .

Further Information

The VAULT project, supported by the London Development Authority, Tower Hamlets 2012 Unit and Lee Valley Regional Park Authority, aims to join together different sections of the community including young people, the elderly and athletes of all ages.

The project will see young people from the 5 Olympic boroughs being trained in digital filmmaking and will produce a series of documentaries in autumn 2009. They will interview athletes, spectators and workers from the 1948 London Olympics. These interviews will be interwoven with archived material from the Games which was the first to be televised on terrestrial TV.