316 Melbourne Road, Williamstown , Melbourne Victoria
T: +613 9398 0034
At Remembrance Video we have been re-living our customers memories for decades. A family history of making movie pictures has left a reputation we’re proud to uphold.
Remembrance Video produce wedding DVD's. Full feature length, Highlights and Video clip Pre-shoots. On the wedding night, big visual screens are an optional service we can provide.
You will probably notice no fancy flash or flying objects are used on our website. That's the way we like it. KISS is the methods we like to use.
Above: Julia Kitanovska, Our future.
Wedding videography can trace its roots back to before the advent of the modern video camera through 8mm and 16mm films. Over the decades while film was the only way to capture moving pictures a few enterprising individuals would take out the family 8mm camera and film the weddings of friends and family. These film cameras were limited by their short load times for the film, high cost of processing and the fact the majority of them could not record sound to the film. But there were a few individuals who had turned the documentation of weddings into a business.
As the 1990s ended Wedding Videography had exploded beyond being just the documentation of weddings. The majority of Wedding Videographers prefer to add the additional term of Event to their description of services, so it is now Wedding and Event Videography. New offerings like Love Stories, Photo Montages, music videos, family biographies and such appeared. Anniversaries, Bar and Bat Mitzvahs, graduations, etc were also being documented in large numbers on video. The skill levels of the industry had progressed, post production took on the skill and quality of Hollywood movies and television shows. The consumer began to have options as to what they wanted in a video, as post production techniques evolved the long form videos which could run 2 to 3 even 4 hours in length, saw a new highly edited and polished form appear called the short form video which ran as little as 10 minutes but on average 30 to 40 minutes.
Copyright Tony Begalinoski 2007. All rights reserved