Done and over with arts school and decided video and documentary is your field of choice? Once that’s decided, you’ll have to research your partners, and if (post)production is a bit of a downfall for you, or maybe something you’re planning to look into in the future, you’ll need some professional help in the meantime, and Lyric Media can definitely be of help. By visiting this site, users will be able to learn about this independent group of producers with a particular fancy for documentaries and archival work, so if you are up for some complex work which involves primary sources and still images, this is a good way to start.
Lyric.net hosts a partial portfolio of the team’s works, which can be downloaded or viewed directly from the site to get a broader perspective of Lyric Media’s works not only in the historic documentary field, but in marketing projects and training material as well. I was quite happy to find information on the kind of software and editing suites they use for their work, as this is the kind of data that technical audiences crave, and hardly find around. Also very compelling about this site’s team is the fact that they actually share their software savvy with newbies by providing introductory courses for 3D Max and similar software, for which a variety of styling and filter plugins is available, all of them for a fee; you can explore a very comprehensive description of these offers online, take a look at previews, or directly proceed to checkout. 







