2014-06-27 13:08 GMT+02:00 Louigi Verona <louigi.verona@xxxxxxxxx>: > I recently started writing jingles, because I need them for my podcast and > videos that our skeptic group produces. I did not want to use somebody > else's when I have the ability to write my own. > > I found jingles to be a very complex and interesting material to work on. So > far I've written only one jingle that I am completely happy with and I am > presenting it to you here. It is a jingle that we use for our videos, when > the title of the video is shown and then the video proceeds to the lecturer. > > www.louigiverona.ru/files/TV_jingle_1.flac > > > > Has anyone else had this experience? > I am going to do a set of screencast videos soon, so I made a very simple introductory video for them: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AhqK-Urz45Q The workflow I used: 1. Create the animation in the browser using svg.js (www.svgjs.com) 2. Record the screen playing the animation using ffmpeg 3. Add music with Ardour3 (using MIDI in this particular case) This could sound as an insane workflow, but it has benefits. (not saying this is an elegant way of doing jingles). -- Carlo Ascani | carlorat.me skype: carloratm irc: carloratm@freenode _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user