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#1 | |||
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Views: 316
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#2 |
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New Boot
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: United States
Posts: 17
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Create your in/out points on the 720p footage, then drop it into your timeline then render out the video (command-r) and it will upres it. This is how I've always done it to good effect...
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#3 |
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Major Player
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Kona, Hawaii
Posts: 579
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When you uprez to 1080, you will get some noticable softning of the 720 image.
There has been much discussion, and various opinions, as to which is better for a 1080 project- use overcrank 720 & uprez vs. shoot 1080 & apply slo motion in post. If you have the time, it might be useful to test both methods and draw your own conclusions ahead of your shooting schedule. The other alternative is to shoot the whole project in 720, in which case overcrank wins hands down for slo mo. |
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#4 |
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Major Player
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: San Rafael, CA
Posts: 902
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And the best method to apply slo mo in post is ( if you can't afford $300 for twixtor)?
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#5 |
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Major Player
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: North Hollywood, Atlanta
Posts: 396
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My process that worked well before;
was to shoot All the Regular Real time footage in 1080p, 24p then the special Slow motion shots in 720p 24p at whatever overcrank speed. Then my editing project i used 720p and imported the 1080p shots into that. With 1080 resolution in a 720p project you have significant amount you can crop in and reframe shots and retain usable resolution. Seems to work better than the other way around which is inserting the 720p shots into a 1080p timeline and upressing them. That was at least my experience.
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