Frage von lesgauloises:I find myself in the format of the jungle After Effects and Premiere can not handle and I understand the different formats at the project settings.
PAL DV - PAL standard
PAL DV Square Pixels <- what is the difference to normal PAL and for what uses this format?
PAL DV widescreen 720x576 <- that's not 16:9 (at least s.PC it looks like 4:3)
PAL DV Widescreen 1024x576 square pixels <- as many pixels does my television but did not.
Can I have someone to help me and explain clearly what this is and where the differences lie?
What attitude should I take for example if I want to have 16:9?
Greeting
Nobby
Antwort von Eugen von ...:
I find myself in the format of the jungle After Effects and Premiere can not handle and I understand the different formats at the project settings.
PAL DV - PAL standard
PAL DV Square Pixels <- what is the difference to normal PAL and for what uses this format?
PAL DV widescreen 720x576 <- that's not 16:9 (at least s.PC it looks like 4:3)
PAL DV Widescreen 1024x576 square pixels <- as many pixels does my television but did not.
Can I have someone to help me and explain clearly what this is and where the differences lie?
What attitude should I take for example if I want to have 16:9?
Greeting
Nobby PAL DV widescreen, in fact, has 720x576 pixels. On your PC is (for example, when editing a screenshot), but displayed as 1024x576. The reason is simple: there is s.Television rectangular pixels, s.PC are unknown.
Antwort von Wiro:
What attitude should I take for example if I want to have 16:9? Hello,
nor a complement to:
If you have PAL 16:9 material is editing the preset DV PAL 720x576 widescreen 48 kHz correctly. It is the industry standard for PAL video. If you are in your processing chain is always strictly s.diese setting will do nothing to go wrong. All components of the camera until the final output medium speak this Language Television.
If you're addicted to experiment and it partout otherwise you will want to have a deeper immersion in the subject matter is not spared. Because of 3 sets is not enough. Adobe, for example, has reading material available here (English):
http://kb.adobe.com/selfservice/viewContent.do?externalId=322300
Greeting Wiro
Antwort von Markus:
PAL DV widescreen 720x576 <- that's not 16:9 (at least s.PC it looks like 4:3) Look here how to fix it:
16:9 in After Effects to create impossible?