This section is for DVXusers to keep ongoing diaries of work in production, to share with others to help them in their own journeys, or for feedback on your work as you go along.
We highly encourage this kind of openness and collaborative discussion! Whether you're a working pro willing to share, just working on your first project, or anything in between, we hope the community will use these opportunities to grow, to teach, to learn, and to share. This is what DVXuser is all about.
Please keep in mind the following posting guidelines:
THREAD TITLES: We ask that you name your thread in a specific format. For example, if you're posting a thread for a feature film it would read "FEATURE: Stricken" If it's a short film it might read "SHORT: A Date with Destiny". Use the built-in prefixes to help you with this. If it's a different kind of project you can't find a prefix for, just do the best you can in the title.
CONTENT: Please share as much as possible, and as much as you are willing, of your production journey! Please share photos, behind-the-scenes glimpses and clips, storyboards, lighting diagrams, and even script pages if you can. It's OK if you don't provide all of that, but ideally, we want to get as far behind the curtain as we can. Detail, detail, detail is invaluable for helping others to understand the process, and to provide the best possible feedback for your project.
THREAD FLOW: We ask that you keep your specific thread on point in discussing the challenges or technical details of your production process, etc. We don't want threads getting completely off-topic into something that should be discussed in another sub-forum, so for example discussions of general cinematography, etc., should be done in the Cinematography sub-forum.
THE FORUM GUIDELINES AND 8 Ps STILL APPLY. Films may have political or religious content, but discussing (or worse, arguing about) that content is still prohibited. You may or may not agree with the film's point of view, but please keep that to yourself. We have a very low level of tolerance on these issues, so please do not push the envelope on that.
Above all, have fun!
We highly encourage this kind of openness and collaborative discussion! Whether you're a working pro willing to share, just working on your first project, or anything in between, we hope the community will use these opportunities to grow, to teach, to learn, and to share. This is what DVXuser is all about.
Please keep in mind the following posting guidelines:
THREAD TITLES: We ask that you name your thread in a specific format. For example, if you're posting a thread for a feature film it would read "FEATURE: Stricken" If it's a short film it might read "SHORT: A Date with Destiny". Use the built-in prefixes to help you with this. If it's a different kind of project you can't find a prefix for, just do the best you can in the title.
CONTENT: Please share as much as possible, and as much as you are willing, of your production journey! Please share photos, behind-the-scenes glimpses and clips, storyboards, lighting diagrams, and even script pages if you can. It's OK if you don't provide all of that, but ideally, we want to get as far behind the curtain as we can. Detail, detail, detail is invaluable for helping others to understand the process, and to provide the best possible feedback for your project.
THREAD FLOW: We ask that you keep your specific thread on point in discussing the challenges or technical details of your production process, etc. We don't want threads getting completely off-topic into something that should be discussed in another sub-forum, so for example discussions of general cinematography, etc., should be done in the Cinematography sub-forum.
THE FORUM GUIDELINES AND 8 Ps STILL APPLY. Films may have political or religious content, but discussing (or worse, arguing about) that content is still prohibited. You may or may not agree with the film's point of view, but please keep that to yourself. We have a very low level of tolerance on these issues, so please do not push the envelope on that.
Above all, have fun!