Frage von Pegasus007:Hello,
my cam is unfortunately only in letterbox format (4:3 with black bars). Does it make sense to remove the beams and a widescreen PAL DVD from it create?
How do I put this in Premiere Pro CS3 s.besten to?
Suffers quality by upscaling much?
Antwort von david2:
Hello,
my cam is unfortunately only in letterbox format (4:3 with black bars). Schade.
Does it make sense to remove the beams and a widescreen PAL DVD from it create? Usually not. If the camera can not 16:9, why do you do that since then? (The Project in 16:9?)
How do I put this in Premiere Pro CS3 s.besten to? New Project in widescreen create a purely material and load up the scale bars are gone. If it is distorted possibly even "interpret visual material."
It is synonymous in the sequence a new sequence and must be strictly invite only once scale (resize)
Suffers quality by upscaling much? Yes. Why it is not worthwhile. (Maybe you can still see through "Unsharp mask" the edges contrasts raise again.)
The only would you have a demonstration and all the people sit so far away that a proper resolution not needed.
Antwort von Pegasus007:
Does it make sense to remove the beams and a widescreen PAL DVD from it create?
Usually not. If the camera can not 16:9, why do you do that since then? (The Project in 16:9?) Well, did the mode for the first time tried. Since I have a 16:9 TV, since 4:3 is not so over ...
Suffers quality by upscaling much?
Yes. Why it is not worthwhile. (Maybe you can still see through "Unsharp mask" the edges contrasts raise again.)
The only would you have a demonstration and all the people sit so far away that a proper resolution not needed. OK, if the quality suffers so much (is indeed clearly established by the De-interlacing and then still expect high) then I simply a 4:3 Letterboxed-DVD. Seems to me useful ...
Antwort von Meggs:
Suffers quality by upscaling much? If you have 4:3 letterbox on a 16:9 television anschaust, you will be watching when the zoom function of your TV use. That is, the Television will broadcast live the upscaling make.
When you first cut off the bars and a true 16:9 Project machst done the premiere upscaling (not live, without time pressure). I think there is at least conceivable that Premiere does better than your Television.
But yes, you can try if you like.
Antwort von PowerMac:
In a sequence of 16:9-specify x1.33 in Premiere. Looks better than if you einzoomte TV.