![]() Then people will suggest all kind of scrips to "improve" things.Īnd the irony is missed, first decimate a video and join forces to repair things. Next people have him install codecs, render uncompressed video, install virtualdub, avisynth and all kind of filters. I am trying to help the OP by making him understand he is decimating the video and inquiring about possible better alternatives while others simply go with the "Premiere Pro is the culprit" approach. It just seems we come from different planets, different perspectives. That's like when a doctor advices his patient to try a different brand of cigarettes instead of blatantly telling him smoking is bad.Īlso I personally found the ageism remark a bit offensive as if older people would have more trouble with the remote of a blu-ray than a DVD player. Not "agreeing" with them and telling him if he tinkers with some MPEG-2 codec options or change the MPEG-2 encoder everything will look great. Rather than suggesting a different encoder, which is obviously not going to make much of a difference someone should have educated the OP about the immense quality difference between Full HD and SD. Then he thinks the problem is Premiere Pro's bad encoder. He looked at a nice 1080/60p recording and was surprised that after decimating it to SD it did no look anything near the original. It seems to me the OP had unrealistic expectations. If you want to apologise for anything, apologise to the OP for ranting unnecessarily about loss of of picture detail when the OP is asking for help with DVD authoring in a forum dedicated to DVD authoring but unfortunately has the audacity to be using a high definition source for said DVD. Thankfully pretty much every time I've done so I've managed it without needing a statement of the obvious in respect to loss of picture detail, and when I have a had problems in the past, whether it be software or picture quality etc, I've been lucky enough to get help without it also being accompanied by unnecessary statements of the obvious in respect to loss of picture detail. ![]() Sometimes to give a copy to a friend/relative, similar to what the OP is doing. Sometimes to put a copy on a portable device, other times to play using a SD player such as a DVD player etc. I'd not go from HD to SD without a reason, but I've done it lots of times (mostly as AVIs with 720x400 type resolutions). It depends how much picture detail the HD source actually has. I'd expect to lose some picture detail and depending on the source it might be anything from "some" to "significant". Honestly I wonder do those who think going from Full HD to SD is just a small step actually realize what damage they do? I know exactly what damage I'll do. I think going from Full HD to SD is not losing some it's losing a significant percentage. Of course you'll lose some picture resolution. Start by asking yourself how Adobe actually went from 50fps progressive to 25fps progressive, and you'll know one reason why your output can't do the impossible, not even with Adobe. The standards exist for several reasons, not the least of which is to frustrate the hell out of oddballs like newpball who are too dense to understand them and too cry-baby to live with the rules of the game. I suggest you find out what you're doing by taking note of what the standards are for the videos you're working and trying to create. ![]() On top of that, Adobe can't resize anything worth a dam. ![]() Using a high-dollar NLE the same way people use a $25 Walmart Special is a waste of your time and money. DVD, 720x576, interlaced or telecined for 25fps PAL BluRay/AVCHD standard definition, 720x576, interlaced or telecined for 25fps PAL BluRay/AVCHD, 1920x1080, interlaced or telecined for 25fps PAL and so does your screwed up output to DVD. Here's the bad news: that original video has invalid frame rate and frame structure for BluRay/AVCHD. I'm guessing you got a 1080p 50fps progressive video from a camera? Cool. Put up big bucks for Adobe bloatware, take 1080p 50fps progressive input and ask to output 25 fps progresive, then pull your hair out trying to guess why Adobe "Pro" allowed you to f+ck up your own video.įirst, do a little research and find out what the hell you're doing.
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