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Life's Sweet – Lone Tree

$15 for Up to Two Tapes or Up to Two Hours of Video-to-DVD Transfer Services ($34.99 Value)

$15
Buy
No Longer Available
Thu Nov 15 06:59:59 UTC 2012
Value
$35
Discount
57%
You Save
$20
  • T460x279
  • Home Theater

In a Nutshell

Technicians convert tape onto archival-quality DVDs; title screens and chapter menus included

The Fine Print

  • Expires 90 days after purchase.
  • Limit 2 per person, may buy 2 additional as gifts. Limit 1 per visit.
  • See the rules that apply to all deals.

More and more people are storing their family videos digitally, as it allows them to tinker with the effects every few decades and change which child blows out the birthday candles first. Leave space for pointless CGI with this Groupon.

$15 for Up to Two Hours or Up to Two Tapes Transferred to DVD ($34.99 Value)

Technicians shift footage—valid for VHS, S-VHS, VHS-C, Hi-8, 8mm, or MiniDV—onto archival-quality DVD, with complimentary title screens and chapter menus. Additional DVD copies are available for $9.99 each.

Life’s Sweet

To remember her son’s childhood, Soraya Cartwright stockpiled pictures, video clips, and mementos. Irked that many types of videotape only have a 15-year lifespan; she looked for a way to safeguard her memories for generations, and as a result founded her own digitizing business, Life’s Sweet. Today, she and her technicians convert videotape and film formats to archival quality DVDs; they can also store audio footage on CDs, rather than player pianos. In addition, they scan pictures to save them in digital format, compile them into photo books, or showcase them on custom greeting cards.

Groupon Says

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The Groupon Guide to: VCR Troubleshooting

Though VCR machines are starting to lose popularity because of DVDs, there are still millions of people using them right at this very moment. If you're one of those millions and you're having problems, consult this handy VCR troubleshooting guide:

PROBLEM: The picture looks fuzzy.
SOLUTION: Though a loose connection could be at fault, it's much more likely that this fuzziness is due to a buildup of hair. Get rid of that hair the easy way—by poking around inside your VCR with a lit candle.

PROBLEM: There's a picture, but no sound plays.
SOLUTION: If you remembered to feed the VCR machine both the video and audio cassettes, then the culprit is definitely the hair. Did you not light the candle before poking around? If you definitely lit the candle, then something you ate made your hair resistant to flames and you'll have to get it out by wedging your head into the VCR and hoping the hair eventually reattaches itself to your scalp.

PROBLEM: The VCR is on fire.
SOLUTION: There's no way to determine how this fire started, but IT WAS NOT BECAUSE OF THE LIT-CANDLE SUGGESTION. To put it out, let the fire run its course. Now your VCR has been fire-cleaned!

PROBLEM: I get headaches while viewing movies.
SOLUTION: You're actually watching a DVD, which produces an irritatingly clear picture. Get rid of the DVD machine right away by smashing it with your durable, eternally useful VCR.

Why is my VCR on fire?

Life's Sweet

  • A

    Lone Tree

    9231 E Lincoln Ave., Suite 800
    Lone Tree, Colorado 80124
    Get Directions