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-   -   Reverse telecine (24p to 60i) question (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/digital-compositing-effects/498190-reverse-telecine-24p-60i-question.html)

Charles Papert July 7th, 2011 10:53 AM

Reverse telecine (24p to 60i) question
 
Have some footage that was shot 24p that needs to be matched to a 60i program. Any thoughts on best way to conform it? Something that can interpolate the missing fields to alter the motion cadence? I'm sure it won't be perfect but I imagine this isn't impossible.

David Tamés July 7th, 2011 11:25 AM

Re: Reverse telecine (24p to 60i) question
 
You can accomplish this conversion with either Episode Pro, the Nattress plug-ins for Final Cut Pro 7, or Apple's Compressor. What platform are you working with?

24p to 60i would not be reverse telecine, as you would be adding the pulldown cadence to go from 24p to 60i.

Charles Papert July 7th, 2011 12:35 PM

Re: Reverse telecine (24p to 60i) question
 
Wassup Tames!

I'm in FC7 and have Compressor. I have the Nattress plug-ins too. Which one would best do this? Please to explain.

David Tamés July 8th, 2011 08:35 AM

Re: Reverse telecine (24p to 60i) question
 
7 Attachment(s)
There are two options when converting from 24p to 60i with Compressor.

(1) Do you prefer smooth motion and the temporal interpolation to be spread across all frames? Then you'd choose "Best" settings for the conversion in compressor.

(2) If you prefer frames 1,2,3 to be "clean" and only frames 4,5 of each 5 frame set to be "interpolated" then you would choose the fast settings.

I've attached images of the Compressor settings and three HDV movies:

HDV-24p-Original.mov (the original 24p movie)

HDV-60i-Output-Fast.mov (conversion output using the "fast settings' with crisper image and faster conversion)

HDV-60i-Output-HQ.mov (conversion output using the "best settings' for smoother temporal conversion)

It's instructive to loop these and look at them on both a progressive and interlaced display at full screen. It's also interesting to note that the conversion of the "fast" version took about 15 second on my laptop, but the "best" took like 90 seconds, so a long piece of footage is probably better converted on faster hardware :-)

David.

Charles Papert July 8th, 2011 10:46 AM

Re: Reverse telecine (24p to 60i) question
 
Genius. Thanks. I'll let you know how it works out.


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