Damian Heffernan
February 20th, 2010, 04:47 AM
Shot a short wedding video for a Friend (don't do wedd vids at all) as a gift and have cut it over the last 12 months. The last two months have been spent trying to work out the whole HD to SD encode to DVD malarkey.
I read hours of forum posts linking to dozens of online articles. I put the Macs to work encoding over days. Some good results, some ordinary ones.
The info here on the forum about frame controls in Compressor do seem valid but mostly if you're going to de-interlace I think.
I tried the Apple presets for DVD best quality 90 minutes, edited the settings to make frame controls on etc etc. These test encodes were OK but suffered from chromatic abberations in my high contrast scenes. Some varients on the encodes had some pixalation also. I tried Mpeg too.
I also tried the export quicktime from FCP as a self contained file, then into compressor then into DVD Studio Pro. Not bad but still not there.
My final (and successful) attempt went like this:
I exported a file from FCP as a self contained QT. I needed self contained as I was moving it from an older FCP Mac to my newer unit with FC Studio. For this file used settings I found in an online article. I moved the QT file (750MB for 3.5 minutes) and got a strange result. The file would preview OK but I couldn't get compressor to open it. Nor FCP. The machine would hang. I tried lots of variations, force quits etc.
Then as a last ditch effort I open it in Color. I adjusted a couple of little things and then made it render. I'm not the most experienced Color user so I didn't even really know what it was rendering as. I just left the defaults.
The resulting file was over 4GB. On info it showed up an Apple Prores codec. I had read this: Exporting HDV Video from the Timeline to Standard Definition DVD (http://www.kenstone.net/fcp_homepage/hdv_timeline_to_sd_dvd.html)
and felt that was an OK option. I put the file into compressor. Fired up the 90 minute DVD preset, turned on frame controls (don't know whether I needed too) and let it go. Short render time (about 45 minutes) and then into DVD SP to burn a DVD - 225MB only.
The resulting output is great. The chromatic abberations are just about gone, pixelation is fine, overall sharpness when I need it is good, softness on my soft focus stuff is fine too. Colours are good.
I lucked into it and probably can't replicate the process :) but I'm very happy with the result.
I read hours of forum posts linking to dozens of online articles. I put the Macs to work encoding over days. Some good results, some ordinary ones.
The info here on the forum about frame controls in Compressor do seem valid but mostly if you're going to de-interlace I think.
I tried the Apple presets for DVD best quality 90 minutes, edited the settings to make frame controls on etc etc. These test encodes were OK but suffered from chromatic abberations in my high contrast scenes. Some varients on the encodes had some pixalation also. I tried Mpeg too.
I also tried the export quicktime from FCP as a self contained file, then into compressor then into DVD Studio Pro. Not bad but still not there.
My final (and successful) attempt went like this:
I exported a file from FCP as a self contained QT. I needed self contained as I was moving it from an older FCP Mac to my newer unit with FC Studio. For this file used settings I found in an online article. I moved the QT file (750MB for 3.5 minutes) and got a strange result. The file would preview OK but I couldn't get compressor to open it. Nor FCP. The machine would hang. I tried lots of variations, force quits etc.
Then as a last ditch effort I open it in Color. I adjusted a couple of little things and then made it render. I'm not the most experienced Color user so I didn't even really know what it was rendering as. I just left the defaults.
The resulting file was over 4GB. On info it showed up an Apple Prores codec. I had read this: Exporting HDV Video from the Timeline to Standard Definition DVD (http://www.kenstone.net/fcp_homepage/hdv_timeline_to_sd_dvd.html)
and felt that was an OK option. I put the file into compressor. Fired up the 90 minute DVD preset, turned on frame controls (don't know whether I needed too) and let it go. Short render time (about 45 minutes) and then into DVD SP to burn a DVD - 225MB only.
The resulting output is great. The chromatic abberations are just about gone, pixelation is fine, overall sharpness when I need it is good, softness on my soft focus stuff is fine too. Colours are good.
I lucked into it and probably can't replicate the process :) but I'm very happy with the result.