Good morning all. There have been many posts over the past couple of weeks concerning the conversion or integration of HD material in an SD timeline, and conversion of an HD timeline to an SD DVD. There have been multiple fine solutions proposed and outlined by many of you experienced and knowledgeable film-makers. During the past weeks I have tried them all, and have discovered a solution that I feel delivers the highest quality conversions/transformations/DVD's of them all. It's been mentioned before, but I'm not sure than many have tried it, and I want to spread the good word for all interested in seamless and non-destructive results.
For the EDIUS user, this is one of the finest programs I've seen or used as a "partner product".
VirtualDub is a FREE program available at www.virtualdub.org. With this program I have imported HD files and with the "resize" filter have succeeded in two areas of conversion that beats the quality of any ProCoder conversions "hands down". I projected all this experimentation onto a 14 foot screen, and between the "before and after" shots have witnessed very little, if any, destruction of the original quality of the clip - and at NO TIME have I seen any down-conversion artifacts - which I have seen in almost all other conversion methods. I resized 1440x1080 16x9 to 720x480 letterbox - quality of the resize is indistinquishable from other footage originally shot in SD of the same subject. Then I pulled the "ultimate" test, and resized 1440x1080 16x9 to 720x480 3x4 - losing a little on each side to fit the frame - and again, the results were so close that only side-by-side comparisons could see any difference (NO ARTIFACTS - only perhaps a slight increase in "grain") between a similar scene shot in SD, and the down-conversion of the HD. If anything, at times the downconversion looked "sharper".
Then I outputed the VirtualDub revision to an .avi file, reinserted into the EDIUS timeline, and the resulting SD timeline (if that's what you're editing in) is seamless in quality.
I have also taken the HD timeline straight to DVD (which many of you have suggested) and then compared that DVD with a DVD made from an SD timeline after resizing the entire timeline down to SD from HD (with the VirtualDub program - does take a little time), and the one really BIG difference, the downconverted timeline results in a more "artifacts-free" DVD.
Since it's a free program, I urge those of you who might benefit from trying it - to at least give it a go! It's perfect adjunct to our beloved EDIUS NLE. No, I don't own any part of the company who makes this product! I have only benefited from using it and making my life not only easier, but more rewarding. If anyone has a problem with some of the settings to get to the results above, let me know and I'll post them!
Good luck - and enjoy!
Alan
For the EDIUS user, this is one of the finest programs I've seen or used as a "partner product".
VirtualDub is a FREE program available at www.virtualdub.org. With this program I have imported HD files and with the "resize" filter have succeeded in two areas of conversion that beats the quality of any ProCoder conversions "hands down". I projected all this experimentation onto a 14 foot screen, and between the "before and after" shots have witnessed very little, if any, destruction of the original quality of the clip - and at NO TIME have I seen any down-conversion artifacts - which I have seen in almost all other conversion methods. I resized 1440x1080 16x9 to 720x480 letterbox - quality of the resize is indistinquishable from other footage originally shot in SD of the same subject. Then I pulled the "ultimate" test, and resized 1440x1080 16x9 to 720x480 3x4 - losing a little on each side to fit the frame - and again, the results were so close that only side-by-side comparisons could see any difference (NO ARTIFACTS - only perhaps a slight increase in "grain") between a similar scene shot in SD, and the down-conversion of the HD. If anything, at times the downconversion looked "sharper".
Then I outputed the VirtualDub revision to an .avi file, reinserted into the EDIUS timeline, and the resulting SD timeline (if that's what you're editing in) is seamless in quality.
I have also taken the HD timeline straight to DVD (which many of you have suggested) and then compared that DVD with a DVD made from an SD timeline after resizing the entire timeline down to SD from HD (with the VirtualDub program - does take a little time), and the one really BIG difference, the downconverted timeline results in a more "artifacts-free" DVD.
Since it's a free program, I urge those of you who might benefit from trying it - to at least give it a go! It's perfect adjunct to our beloved EDIUS NLE. No, I don't own any part of the company who makes this product! I have only benefited from using it and making my life not only easier, but more rewarding. If anyone has a problem with some of the settings to get to the results above, let me know and I'll post them!
Good luck - and enjoy!
Alan
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