Jose di Cani
October 30th, 2004, 05:57 AM
HI
IF I watch a dvd (movie or documentary, pal,24 film-like, whatever), they have beautifull scenes. Then when you import them in adobe/vegas for instance yoiu get these weird looking edges in the video. NOW I understand that is is due to the PC's MONITOR. It can only handle interlaced videos.
SO how can I be able to view progresive 24fps videos (frame work) on my pc without having to look at a screen with full of interlacing artifacts? How can I be able to view cdr/pal video on pc without this interlacing problems?
Do I need to buy a special tv? And what happens if you export a 25fps to video mpg or avi. Will the interlacing artifacts go away? I don't understand it. I guess you need to burn your exmported video file to cd or dvd and then watch it on tv. BUT THE TV ONLY PROVIDES INTERLACED VIDEO, so how the hell do the profesionals gte video on dvd, cassete or cdr?
http://www.dvinfo.net/conf/showthread.php?s=&threadid=10426Computer video screens are always progressive, and most NLE viewers don't interlace, so if you import interlaced footage you're going to see artifacts. But it has nothing to do with the way the footage is imported - you can't control the frame/normal setting anywhere except at the camera when you shoot. Once it's shot in that way, it's shot. You can convert with software but it's rarely very good. And you can never convert progressive to interlaced (you can, but it won't be 60 fps)
IF I watch a dvd (movie or documentary, pal,24 film-like, whatever), they have beautifull scenes. Then when you import them in adobe/vegas for instance yoiu get these weird looking edges in the video. NOW I understand that is is due to the PC's MONITOR. It can only handle interlaced videos.
SO how can I be able to view progresive 24fps videos (frame work) on my pc without having to look at a screen with full of interlacing artifacts? How can I be able to view cdr/pal video on pc without this interlacing problems?
Do I need to buy a special tv? And what happens if you export a 25fps to video mpg or avi. Will the interlacing artifacts go away? I don't understand it. I guess you need to burn your exmported video file to cd or dvd and then watch it on tv. BUT THE TV ONLY PROVIDES INTERLACED VIDEO, so how the hell do the profesionals gte video on dvd, cassete or cdr?
http://www.dvinfo.net/conf/showthread.php?s=&threadid=10426Computer video screens are always progressive, and most NLE viewers don't interlace, so if you import interlaced footage you're going to see artifacts. But it has nothing to do with the way the footage is imported - you can't control the frame/normal setting anywhere except at the camera when you shoot. Once it's shot in that way, it's shot. You can convert with software but it's rarely very good. And you can never convert progressive to interlaced (you can, but it won't be 60 fps)