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-   -   1440 vs. 1920 (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/cineform-software-showcase/142704-1440-vs-1920-a.html)

Adam Gold January 29th, 2009 11:11 PM

1440 vs. 1920
 
Just upgraded to Prospect, and maybe this feature was in Aspect but I didn't notice it: I can convert from 1440 to 1920 upon capture.

So, does it make a difference? Does it matter whether I set up a 1920 project and convert all 1440 upon capture, or just do what I used to do: a 1440 project at 1.33?

Couldn't find any recommendations on the Cineform site about this.

Laurence Kingston January 30th, 2009 01:09 AM

I wouldn't bother unless you are mixing 1920x1080 and 1440x1080 footage. The 1920x1080 makes sense if you have a 1920x1080 camera, but interpolating your raw footage won't look any better than interpolating to those dimensions for your final render if you want a little extra resolution for your titles and graphics.

Adam Gold January 30th, 2009 01:12 AM

That's what I thought, but just wasn't sure. Appreciate the help.

Herman Van Deventer January 30th, 2009 01:43 AM

More info / feedback -

Robert Young's Answer - Thread - http://www.dvinfo.net/conf/cineform-...ls-hdlink.html

Adam Gold January 30th, 2009 02:07 AM

So it looks like you could go either way and it won't make a huge difference, especially with HDV.

Robert Young February 2nd, 2009 12:59 PM

I'm still impressed with 1920 sq pix with regard to direct transcode to other formats (DVD, BR, Flash, etc.), so I bring everything into a project as 1920x1080. I can output whatever delivery format I need directly from the CF 1920 timeline with AME or Procoder and get excellent image quality.
This represents a huge simplification and time savings over my prior 1440 workflow.

Adam Gold February 2nd, 2009 01:16 PM

Hm. Might be worth an experiment. Thanks for the input.

Graham Hickling February 2nd, 2009 01:43 PM

One difference: on my Q6600 capturing/converting HDV to CFHD in it's native 1440x1080 happens realtime. Capturing/converting/resizing takes quite a bit longer so I end up sitting drinking too much coffee at times.

And no, it wasn't a feature offered in AspectHD (as its resolution limit was 1440x1080).

Ray Bell February 2nd, 2009 04:30 PM

Another good use to up-convert is when you want to create 720 footage with pan's and such... you bring in the 1920x1080 and you can pan,crop,crawl... then output the completed scene at 720...


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