DV Info Net

DV Info Net (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/)
-   What Happens in Vegas... (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/what-happens-vegas/)
-   -   Photos in 1080i video project (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/what-happens-vegas/481608-photos-1080i-video-project.html)

David Jasany July 9th, 2010 09:27 AM

Photos in 1080i video project
 
I've built a HD 1080i video project and I'm nesting a photo montage veg into the video project veg. The size of my jpg photos are 3648 x 2736. The entire project will be delivered on a SD DVD for widescreen display and also to tape in HDV.

I've done this before several times but I've never been sure if I'm doing it correctly or optimally.Should the photo montage project properties be set to 1080i? If I set the project properties to 1080i, should I still crop the photos to 16:9?

I know I should downsize the photos and convert them to PNGs, but so far on my new PC and Vegas 8.1 I'm not having any problem rendering the jpg images at their full size.

Thanks,
Dave

David Jasany July 10th, 2010 07:46 AM

Anybody? Does my question make sense?

I forgot to mention I also have the option of using Ultimate-S to crop the photos to match the project aspect ratio.

Dave

Edward Troxel July 10th, 2010 06:48 PM

I would set the projects to HD to match the print to tape.

Adam Stanislav July 11th, 2010 12:26 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by David Jasany (Post 1546802)
Should the photo montage project properties be set to 1080i?

I don't see why. Your photos are static, which makes them progressive. It is easy for Vegas (or any other software) to convert progressive footage to interlaced, while moving in the opposite direction is very difficult and may even be impossible.

Quote:

Originally Posted by David Jasany (Post 1546802)
If I set the project properties to 1080i, should I still crop the photos to 16:9?

Well, you should not convert it to 1080i, but even if you do, if you want the photos to fill the screen and your target screen is 16:9, then by all means crop them to 16:9. But that really needs to be an artistic decision, not a technical one.

Quote:

Originally Posted by David Jasany (Post 1546802)
I know I should downsize the photos and convert them to PNGs

Says who? If the originals came as PNG, then you do not want to convert them to JPEG because you would lose some information (since JPEG is lossy and PNG is not). But if the originals came as JPEG, converting them to PNG will gain you nothing except a larger file size. Whatever information was lost when the JPEGs were created is lost forever and will not be recovered by converting them to PNG.

Now if you decide to downsize them, then and only then does it make sense to save them as PNG because downsizing loses some information and saving them to JPEG after that would lose even more.

However, I would not downsize them unless Vegas is doing a poor job downsizing them and you have some other software that does it better.

Personally, I use a different approach. I shoot all my photos on film and scan them myself with a professional scanner. I scan them to whatever size I need, often to several different sizes/resolutions. That way I get the best scan possible for each different size. But if your photos are digital from scratch and, as you say, Vegas is giving you good results, then keep them the way they are.

David Jasany July 12th, 2010 06:45 AM

Thanks Ed, Adam,

What I'm doing currently with the photo montage veg is setting the properties to 1080i. The I use Ultimate-S to crop the images to 1080.

Adam, as for setting the properties to progressive, I don't understand how that would work since this project is nested into a 1080i video project.

Dave

Adam Stanislav July 12th, 2010 10:09 AM

David, if it works for you, then keep it that way. You can certainly import 1080p files into a 1080i project, so you do not have to prepare it in I but can prepare it in P. But if you are already doing it in I and it works, it is good.


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 10:43 AM.

DV Info Net -- Real Names, Real People, Real Info!
1998-2024 The Digital Video Information Network