This is way off topic, but wanted to relay a recent experience.
Short story long...
My Dad passed away in August 2000 and my Mom in January 2001. Dad had an on and off battle with cancer over the course of 20 years. I like to think my Dad beat the cancer and not the other way around. Just after my Dad passed away, my Mom was diagnosed with terminal brain cancer and she passed away shortly after that.
Sometime in 2003, I finally got around to scanning in all of Mom and Dads photographs. The main reason was to preserve them on CD, and the other is that with four sisters, the pictures would eventually be split up and the chance of getting them all back would be poor at best.
Since scanning the pictures in, I got into video editing. Over the past couple of weeks, I organized the images and put them into a slide show along with music, added transitions, pan/zooms and burned them to DVD. There were around 500 pictures in total, grouped by Wedding, Anniversaries, Children, Family Friends, etc. and put into chronological order. I added sub titles so that relatives and friends names would not be lost as the DVD gets handed down to my son and so on.
This is the good part of video editing.
The bad part, if you can call it that (for me anyway), was to see my Dad progress from winning the Most Beautiful Baby in Toronto, to second place Body Builder as a young man (again, in Toronto), to a not so old man withered away by cancer, all in the span of 10-12 minutes. I didn't notice the transition in him until I viewed the video of him as a whole.
When I showed the final video to my wife, it brought tears to her eyes, as she experienced the same emotions that I did.
Anyway, don't want to depress anyone. In the end, this is has been a very worthwhile project. So much so, that we are going to do the same with my wife's family pictures.
In some way, I think this has been good therapy for me in helping me deal with their deaths.
Thanks for listening...
Al
Short story long...
My Dad passed away in August 2000 and my Mom in January 2001. Dad had an on and off battle with cancer over the course of 20 years. I like to think my Dad beat the cancer and not the other way around. Just after my Dad passed away, my Mom was diagnosed with terminal brain cancer and she passed away shortly after that.
Sometime in 2003, I finally got around to scanning in all of Mom and Dads photographs. The main reason was to preserve them on CD, and the other is that with four sisters, the pictures would eventually be split up and the chance of getting them all back would be poor at best.
Since scanning the pictures in, I got into video editing. Over the past couple of weeks, I organized the images and put them into a slide show along with music, added transitions, pan/zooms and burned them to DVD. There were around 500 pictures in total, grouped by Wedding, Anniversaries, Children, Family Friends, etc. and put into chronological order. I added sub titles so that relatives and friends names would not be lost as the DVD gets handed down to my son and so on.
This is the good part of video editing.
The bad part, if you can call it that (for me anyway), was to see my Dad progress from winning the Most Beautiful Baby in Toronto, to second place Body Builder as a young man (again, in Toronto), to a not so old man withered away by cancer, all in the span of 10-12 minutes. I didn't notice the transition in him until I viewed the video of him as a whole.
When I showed the final video to my wife, it brought tears to her eyes, as she experienced the same emotions that I did.
Anyway, don't want to depress anyone. In the end, this is has been a very worthwhile project. So much so, that we are going to do the same with my wife's family pictures.
In some way, I think this has been good therapy for me in helping me deal with their deaths.
Thanks for listening...
Al