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Entries in CD packaging (3)

Monday
Feb042013

Get your CD orders in early for Boyup Brook and Fairbridge Festivals

With the annual music festival season getting underway in a couple of weeks it's a good idea to get your CD and DVD projects underway early.

Whether you're doing a short run card sleeve CD or bulk run of digipacks We've got artwork templates and helpful hints on our website to help you get that part underway, ineviatably we find the artwork prep is the area that slows down a new release.  Click here for templates

Allow time to get the completed masters and artwork to us, so that we can deliver the finished product to you before you make your way to the events. 

Call Lyndsey on 08 9375 3902 to discuss your upcoming project.

 

 

 

Saturday
Mar102012

What is the correct CD master format?

As technology changes it opens up a whole world of posibilities with various format issues. This is no more evident than when you are creating a CD master for your next audio CD project.  Whether it be a bands latest CD or EP or an educational product there are some important considerations to take in to account when making your final production master.

So how do your know which format to supply for manufacture of your discs? CD Audio? Aiff? Mp3? Flac? .Wav? and what should the parameters be? 

The first question that has to be asked is where do expect customers to play the CD? If your answer is "at the least a regular cd audio player, portable CD walkman or car player" then your only reliable and highest quality option is .cda or CD audio format. 

CD Audio format is:  Stereo, 16bit and 44.1Khz sampling rate.  No other format can be directly used to make your CD copies apart from a DDP image. (This is usually done by higher end Mastering Engineers for replicated discs).  Find out the difference between Replicated and Duplicated CDs here

If you supply other formats such as a disc with Mp3, Wav files, Aiff, Itunes M4a files or upload/download of files via our FTP server or on a thumb drive, this will require time to make a new master and also need to be approved before the production process begins.

The CD audio master can then be analysed by us prior to sending to production to ensure it meets quality standards.

As mentioned previously some audio masters are now provided by Mastering houses in DDP format. Often these are uploaded to our server as an image file with a MD5 Checksum file. This checksum is used to double check the integrity of the file when your audio discs are replicated. 

When your engineer is sending DDP files you should request a normal CD master made from the same image to verify and check for errors prior to production. Currently we cannot analyse DDP images for quality issues as they are not strictly an audio disc. It is therefore important for you to know what you are sending to production is ok and is your responsibility.

DDP images are generally not used for production of duplicated discs, that is, runs typically under 500 copies. 

There are many compressed audio file types available now and these should not be used for your audio masters. They do not represent the hours of work that you have done in the studio and are best used for streaming audio playback or portable digital devices such as computers, Ipods and Mp3 Players. 

Files that are not suitable for high quality CD masters include MP3 (of any sample rate) Ogg Vorbis, WMA, Flac, .Wav files, AIFF, M4a and Mp4s.  Although often a CD master will be made directly from Wav files, this format itself (a MS computer based audio file) is not directly suitable for a replicated or duplicated run of CDs. 

It is possible to re-master these compressed audio formats to a CD master suitable for production, For example if the original masters have been lost. However there will be losses of quality compared to the original recordings and the results will depend on the time taken in the re mastering process.  We can create new production masters in our editing suite from a variety of different formats. More information on CD Mastering is available here

If you are producing talking books or educational programmes then often both CD Audio and Mp3 versions are created. Mp3 versions will save multiple discs being used in the production process as you will be able to put considerably more audio on a disc than and normal audio CD. The number of discs used will be determined by the amount of compression used on the audio files.  Playback of the Mp3 discs will require a player that can play that specific format, such as in a computer, laptop, some newer portable players and car players.

Finally using high quality discs and mastering at the lowest practical speed will provide higher quality masters, We have a mastering pack available with tips and master grade discs here:

If you are unsure if your master disc is the correct format for producing your next CD project give us a call on 08 9375 3902 or 1300 4 PROCOPY and we'll advise you on it's suitability. 

 

Friday
Apr022010

Video Faq files launched at ProCopy

To help you choose packaging and printing options for your next CD, DVD or USB project we are launching a series of videos describing some of the many options available at ProCopy

Lyndsey and Peter will show you various packaging options for CDs and DVDs, various printed booklet options and digpack style cd and dvd boxes.

Mark and Steve will show you the CD mastering pack and some of the facilities available in the video editing suite, - Including high grade slide scanning, video conversions and film transfers to DVD and our video editing and filming options. 

Bookmark our pages so that you keep up with the latest products available, or call us on 1300 4 PROCOPY to talk with us directly.

ProCopy How to Video Facts - Lyndsey describes the variety of CD packaging options available for your next CD project