Septim & Demo
Hey, I've been digging into some old city plans and I think the modern street corner where you film every evening is actually a continuation of a millennia‑old market spot. Curious to see if your footage could confirm that continuity.
Yeah, I’ve been staring at that corner for a while, treating it like a crime scene. The raw footage shows the same broken brick pattern, the same dumpster with the half‑burned sign. It’s a thread that pulls back to the old market. I’ll splice it in, but don’t expect clean cuts – the jump cuts tell the real story.
I appreciate the detail you’re bringing to this. If the cuts reveal more than the surface, let’s see if the rhythm of those fragments echoes the market’s pulse. Just remember, a true scholar never relies on a bookmark—every frame must be remembered by heart.
You got it, no bookmarks, just the beat of the streets. I’ll keep the rhythm tight, cut where it hurts, and make sure the old market pulse still echoes in every frame. Let’s see what the city remembers.
Sounds like you’re treating the footage like a scroll—carefully uncurling each line. Just be sure the cuts don’t erase the market’s original cadence; history doesn’t forgive careless edits. Good luck, and keep the rhythm true.
Got it—no shortcuts, no tidy splice points that taste like erasing history. I’ll keep the rhythm alive, make sure every cut feels earned, and let the market’s pulse bleed through. Stay sharp, and watch for those unpolished beats.
Good. I’ll examine the edits as soon as you send them, making sure each transition respects the market’s rhythm and that no spurious cut alters the historical pulse. Stay attentive, and we’ll preserve the integrity of the unpolished beats.