Frage von Ricasoli:Good evening,
I want to deinterlace a clip with PS12. What setting should I choose here?
Under
Method I think it is
Bicubic. But as the setting in
the field? Odd field is
the field or
Straight? I have filmed in 25p mode with my SonyFX1000, yes, the 25p store the material in 50i.
I thank you for the help.
Regards
Guenther
Antwort von Ricasoli:
Has anyone a clue?
Antwort von TheBubble:
I have filmed in 25p mode with my SonyFX1000, yes, the 25p store the material in 50i.
When Progressive was filmed, does not need to be deinterlaced. When editing in video editing programs for each recording easy manual to progressively adapt.
Antwort von Ricasoli:
When Progressive was filmed, does not need to be deinterlaced. When editing in video editing programs for each recording easy manual to progressively adapt. Hi Bubble,
But with the FX1000 the 25p material is just stored in 50i and then deinterlaced:
From Slashcam test:
Continuous 25P
Friends of the progressive 25p recording also get their money: The built-in CMOS chips can scan images with 25 frames per second. For compatibility reasons Sonydie converts images (but, unlike Canon) before being stored on the tape in 50i HDV format. On the one hand ensures greater compatibility in cutting programs that do not know the pure 25P-stream, but synonymous for more work if you have the fields back together in the editing program. For even more "film-look touch of a button," ensuring cinema gamma and-color settings that can be stored as synonymous in the six available Picture Profiles.
I just need to know which setting (; odd or even field) You choose to deinterlace 50i material to ...
Gruss
Ricasoli
Antwort von TheBubble:
But with the FX1000 the 25p material is just stored in 50i Even. The recordings are indeed stored in a file that supports interlaced video, and do justice to the specification to be, yet the two fields at the same time have been included. It must therefore not be deinterlaced, it is sufficient to inform the editing software that the file contains progressive recordings.