Does anybody know in how far one eighth of 16:9 to secure borders must be? Unfortunately did not have regular TV here, so I might try it once. But it really should be pruned in the vertical axis of nothing, since as the black bars are then. Or am I wrong?
Regards, Johnny.
Antwort von Wiro:
It is, in fact, that you can see the full picture vertically too. Circumcised is only on the left and right. In the picture are the white lines that appear on your NLE, the safe areas, the red lines show what is seen on a 4:3-TV. Gruss Wiro
Antwort von clint:
hmm, but if one has a 16:9 TV, he sees no borders above and below, ergo, one must note my opinion the save area already. Or basically just to gehts normalo on a 16:9 TV?
Otherwise, it is the 5% or 10%, as synonymous with 4:3 I'd say. See this picture synonymous here: http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Picture:Safe_area_4x3_screen_with_16x9.jpg
Or, I understand now what is wrong?
ciao ...
Antwort von Johnny:2:
Yes thank you very much erstmal! Especially good for the Picture! Very helpful. Clint has probably been right in saying that one should look for in a 16:9 TV on the vertical 5%. So I'll do this time: o)
Many thanks to you - Johnny.
Antwort von Wiro:
"Johnny: 2" wrote:
So I'll do this time: o)
I'd like you've got synonymous! Secure borders are no harassment of the programmers, but there so that they comply with ;-))) 4:3-respect, your question was actually meant purely theoretical. Gruss Wiro
I now have yet another issue where I am not yet quite vias. Link of the above says that the safety margins at 15%, in order of 16:9 to 4:3 convert to. My monitor is synonymous Control a Save Area to enable the man and shows me at 4-3 for a much smaller margin - about 25%. This in turn then votes in accordance with the following link:
Antwort von Johnny:2:
Ah, ok, I've just come to the 25%: from 720 to 576th
But how do you do that with the Width? As the 66% are to be interpreted? And why the TV is not simply scaled down the entire picture and then display it with black bars? I would stop in a smaller version of my entire width. * I'm confused ...*