Torrey C. Harris
December 29th, 2008, 09:16 PM
I've got a buddy who owns a avid express studio system
he is trying to import some jpeg pics into his timeline. When he imports the pics and puts them on the timeline they look horrible and they look horrible when he outputs to a dvd.
almost blurry looking he says
any tricks or settings he needs to change
any help greatly appreciated!!!!!
Peter Szilveszter
December 29th, 2008, 10:18 PM
I've got a buddy who owns a avid express studio system
he is trying to import some jpeg pics into his timeline. When he imports the pics and puts them on the timeline they look horrible and they look horrible when he outputs to a dvd.
almost blurry looking he says
any tricks or settings he needs to change
any help greatly appreciated!!!!!
Try using the Avid Pan & Zoom and load the image via the plugin, works pretty well and you even have some options to select what filter you use when you zoom into the image.
here is a tutorial Using Pan and Zoom with Avid Xpress - Final Cut Studio, Avid, Adobe, and Video Streaming Training (http://www.geniusdv.com/news_and_tutorials/2008/01/using-pan-and-scan-with-avid-xpress.php)
I think the image size limit is 3000x3000
Vinh Nguyen Quang
December 29th, 2008, 10:36 PM
In Control Panel of Avid, choose imagge import option, check to fix screen.Your jpeg images will fix the size of your timeline
Peter Szilveszter
December 29th, 2008, 10:46 PM
In Control Panel of Avid, choose imagge import option, check to fix screen.Your jpeg images will fix the size of your timeline
This still gives you low image quality, the Avid Pan & Zoom is specifically designed for importing still images to maintain the higher resolutions.
Richard Alvarez
December 30th, 2008, 08:39 AM
Avid Pan and ZOom is the way to go. IT gives you the option of changing the resolution and also the fields. Make sure when he imports the stills, he is selecting the right formats. It's a very good program, I just did a ten minute video of all pan/scans - looks beautiful.
Tito Haggardt
December 30th, 2008, 02:31 PM
Photoshop the Jpegs
adjust the pixels to match the project (image/ pixal aspect ratio)
adjust the size to match the project (image/ image size)
save as a tif or pict (file/save as/format)
drop them in a bin
edit them in
aloha
tito
Peter Szilveszter
December 30th, 2008, 05:55 PM
Photoshop the Jpegs
adjust the pixels to match the project (image/ pixal aspect ratio)
adjust the size to match the project (image/ image size)
save as a tif or pict (file/save as/format)
drop them in a bin
edit them in
aloha
tito
This is ok if you just want a full screen image, but if you want to pan or zoom on the image this gives very poor results. As said earlier use Pan & Zoom for images regardless of aspect or size, nothing else will give as good results within Avid other then using Avid FX.
Tito Haggardt
December 31st, 2008, 02:11 PM
This is ok if you just want a full screen image, but if you want to pan or zoom on the image this gives very poor results. As said earlier use Pan & Zoom for images regardless of aspect or size, nothing else will give as good results within Avid other then using Avid FX.
thanks Peter
i will give it a go
tito