Frage von Ray76:Hello together ...
I min in Premiere Pro has a about 10 minutes. Film cut. This is a film with various dance scenes, and sometimes I have changed the scenes at high speeds.
Now I want to burn the film on DVD. Did the Project exported as AVI and then with a DVD-Progr. Gebrennt from Sonic ... Unfortunately, the picture is not clear in some scenes. (Distortion). 've Already tried various burning options but it just does not work, that the picture is equally good as when I watch the AVI file on the PC. 'm Desperate, and you would be very grateful for hints what I could do more.
Here are the settings of my Proejkts:
Pixel Aspect Ratio: D1 / DV NTSC; Lower Field First, format: 29.97 lps-drop frame timecode
Danke schon mal in advance.
Gruss
rayray
Antwort von Dongball:
Why do you export it as an AVI from Premiere??
Export it as a DVD compliant MPEG file but, it must convert your Sonic nich synonymous with great difficulty the file.
Perhaps, therefore, yes.
Antwort von ray76:
danke erstmal ...
sorry, abr, I can not find in Premiere, export as an MPEG!
I must download and install anything else there also?
Thank you.
rayray
Antwort von AndyZZ:
Because when you create the export "Movie" choose, there is something one point (including if only I knew how to say), which turns it into an MPEG. Look at the program's Help at export opportunities or MPEG. And why do you export NTSC? Have not filmed in PAL??
Antwort von ray76:
I've filmed with a Sony Cam ...
When I started the Project, and the scene was captured, I forgot to switch to PAL and therefore included as NTSC. Does it matter? I can in hindsight
The Project no longer change of NTSC to PAL. or?
That would be with the export as an MPEG, I will try at home. Thank you very much ...
bruno
Antwort von Markus:
... I forgot to switch it to PAL and therefore included as NTSC. Does it matter? Look at this, what are the differences between PAL and NTSC, then you can you even answer the question easily.
But were actually Recording in NTSC format stored on the calculator? Check the time with GSpot!