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#Idvd there was an error during movie encoding how toIt took a while to figure out how to use it. Another source, supposedly an “expert,” says de-interlacing “doesn’t work.” (WTF does that mean?) How do I know what’s right? One source says I must de-interlace before the video is downsized to SD for DVD. Like in a video clip of a cherry orchard filled with trees that have leaves that flutter in the wind. The result is a kind of flicker anywhere there’s motion. TVs supposedly can de-interlace on the fly I don’t know if modern HD TVs can, though. Interlacing is one method of scanning video progressive is the other. Right now, the challenge is focusing around interlacing. Then, like a chef, I can fine-tune the recipe to see if I can make it any better. What I need is a recipe, a starting point, a list of steps that should work. Do I need to change the shape of the pixels, too?Īnd what about the contradictions? One guys says do A while another guy says do B, which is completely different. Other times, when you make changes they recommend, the appearance of the video changes drastically for example, turning on the anamorphic check box in FCP sequence settings squishes the picture, making everyone look short and fat. Instead, there are four or ten or twelve options it could be. They’ll recommend a compression scheme, but when you go to the menu of options, what they mentioned doesn’t appear exactly as they referred to it. To make matters worse, answers in forums tend to be vague. Do I convert video before bringing into FCP? If so what do I convert it to? How about interlacing? Downsizing? What compression schemes? What settings? And what about the anamorphic setting? Does that still apply with current technology? But they failed to explain how to get my kind of video (1920x1080i60 AVCHD) into standard DVD format. #Idvd there was an error during movie encoding movieI watched video courses about Final Cut Pro and DVD Studio Pro and they helped me build my movie and DVD. Not having a standard TV handy for testing purposes, I have no idea what it looks like on one of those. For the past two days, I’ve been banging my head against the wall, trying to figure out the problem. Other standard DVDs look fine - actually, great - on that TV. But when I build a DVD, it looks like crap on my HD TV. I have the latest version of Final Cut Studio, which should have all the tools I need to get the job done. I’m trying very hard to create an SD DVD based on original 1080i HD footage. One part of my current troubleshooting effort. ![]()
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