Woldini Productions

Woldini Productions

Videos Produced for the Canadian Museum of History and Canadian War Museum

Videos Produced for the Canadian Museum of History and Canadian War Museum

Press clips for the Media to advertise an upcoming Event called Tank Week.

Press clips for the museum’s acquisition of a World War II amphibious vehicle. One of the most complete B.A.R.V.’s still left in the world. The museum will be spending the next few years restoring it.

Canadian Museum of History’s entry into the 2026 Museum Next: Green Summit conference

I always find it incredibly rewarding working with the Canadian Museum of History. My most recent contract as a media producer had me doing a fair amount of paper pushing, but luckily in late November of 2025 I was tasked with the creation of this video submission. Beyond the standard budgetary challenges this project was also subject to a very short production time frame. This led to me do most of the work myself rather than outsourcing the editing or the shooting to an external vendor. Luckily I had also begun shooting stock arial footage of the museum earlier that summer.

Older content from 2022

Social Media Videos Produced for the Bank of Canada between October 2023 until July of 2024

I worked at the Bank of Canada for 2 years before leaving for a different career opportunity in late 2024. In my second year at the Bank I was charged with the development of some social media video content. Together with the head of Social Media and a number of stake holders, we began to develop a format for a series underlining our outreach and messaging. We called this series Snap Shot in English and Point Parole in French.

While I left the Bank just as the series was taking off, many of the procedures and practices I had designed still serve their video content today.

Below are a few examples of these videos.

Independant projects

On a whim in early 2010, two colleagues and I decided to make the 6,990km road trip from Ottawa Ontario to Park City Utah and back.  We were known at the Slamdance Film Festival as the crazy Canadians.  As students of a small (now defunct) documentary program, we took it upon ourselves to interview as many of the filmmakers as we could get in front of my Sony HDV camera.  What we got were approximately nine hours of stories and advice from professionals trying to find their way in an industry plagued by the upheaval of the digital revolution.  This short snippet from that adventure was edited by my colleague Jeremy Plante, but was produced, shot and directed by him, Jes Ellacott and myself.

In 2017 I met Martin while waiting for some Chinese food.  As a traveler from Belgium he had crossed our country writing songs in each of the cities he had stayed in.  At the end of March 2018 he released his first solo album entitled Yarns.  This is the music video we produced together to mark the special occasion. 

I was about to throw a wedding party when I ran into Martin again. We had each been travelling and he had moved a couple of times since we last saw each other, but I never like to let friendship fade. He wanted to do another video with me, and although I was juggling wedding arrangements and client work, I was keen on the idea. Any opportunity to work with a talent as bright as his, must not be passed on.

White-Out was inspired by a storm on the 416highway between Ottawa and Toronto. Martin had never encountered such blinding snow before he had come to Canada. He had never heard of the term before and when he was relating the story to me he wasn’t even sure if I would know it. But I’ve known white outs all too well, and I had just recently found myself on that very same highway, driving a extra large sprinter Van through a massive storm.

More content coming soon.