Quote:
Originally Posted by Andy E Well, your camera is a MiniDV one (apparently) and if you're in "PAL" land then PAL DV would be a good starting point for your project settings - assuming you did a standard firewire capture into your PC that is. PAL DV is lower field first and that is what the default project settings within Vegas use.
You should be able to determine whether your source footage is "good" by playing back some of problem areas from your original camcorder tapes onto your TV.
It would be useful to know what you've been doing to "spice" up the quality. A few straight cuts and dissolves and rendering back out to DV-AVI again shouldn't give any problems. Rendering out to MPEG2 for DVD creation is a different matter - you may have up bitrate settings to reduce the artifacts you say you're seeing.
But first things first. Determine whether your original footage is ok, set the project settings back to their defaults for PAL DV and render out a "problematic" region of your project to DV-AVI and check the playback of that. |
Ok, well my project settings are now set to:
PAL DV (720x576; 25,000 fps) Field order: Lower field first
Pixelformat: 32 bit floating point
composition gamma: 1.000 (linear)
Full resolution rendering quality: Best
Motion blur type: Gaussian
Deinterlace method: Interpolate
After viewing problem areas on the TV iīve discovered that the thorny edges of the lights (in the scene with all the lights i mentioned) are there even in the original material. Generally things have much better sharpness though. Could this perhaps have to do with the difference between TV-screens and computer-screens? The way itīs being seen on the computerscreen isnt equivalent to the way it looks on TV?
i`ve been experimenting with different templates in "render as" and with such options as "pixel format", "deinterlace method", "frame rate" and "field order". All these options has been restored to original shape afterwards though with the exception of pixel format which i switched from "8-bit" to "32-bit floating point" without noticing any difference in render output.
Unexperienced as i am with rendering and quality-issues iīm not sure what you mean by "A few straight cuts and dissolves". I made two DV AVI-render samples however. One (set in custom settings for rendering) with
Field order: Lower field first and one with
Field order: none (progressive)
Lower field first causes the lines to appear while progressive removes them. Itīs safe to say that
Field order: none (progressive) makes it a whole lot easier to watch it seems more grainy however then a rendered Mpeg2-version with
Field order: none (progressive). The Mpeg2 version on the other hand looks less sharp and more colorfaded not to mention stretched horizontally. This does not cause it to look much worse than the AVI-version though. But it doesnt look better either. The difference seems pretty marginal and since iīm making a DVD i figure MPEG 2 is the way to go!?
I use variable bitrate with maximum 9 500 000 and minimum 192 000. As iīm planning on fitting it on DVD i canīt really turn the bitrate up that much. Should i perhaps switch to a constant bitrate of say 6 000 000? Iīve read somewhere that something around 5,50 mbps is appropriate for fitting in 2 hours on DVD but maybe thatīs not correct!?
Perhaps i can back my story up (so to speak) with some screencaps of the different results of rendering!? Iīm not familiar with uploading images just to be linked to and i donīt really know where i could upload them to. At first i thought facebook would work but then i realized i have a limited access account so that wont work. If you wish perhaps you could guide me towards some easy wbesite i can upload to without to much trouble.
Thank you for taking the time to help me out! I really appreciate it!