Pixelation Problem...
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- Joined: Fri Dec 23, 2005 6:15 am
Pixelation Problem...
Whenever I save an AMV that has been made in Adobe Premiere Pro, I always have a pixelation problem when I compress it with DivX.
Here's the settings I've been using, plus some ones I could use:
File Type: Microsoft AVI
Compressor: DivX 6.4.0 Codec (1 Logical CPU)
Frame Rate: 29.97 (the video clips are 23 frames if that has anything to do with it (can change the frame rate setting if needed))
Pixel Aspect Ratio: Either Square Pixels (1.0), D1/DV NTSC (0.9), D1/DV NTSC Widescreen 16:9 (1.2), D1/DV PAL (1.067), etc...
I can also configure the DivX Codec if that helps.
Thanks in advance.
Here's the settings I've been using, plus some ones I could use:
File Type: Microsoft AVI
Compressor: DivX 6.4.0 Codec (1 Logical CPU)
Frame Rate: 29.97 (the video clips are 23 frames if that has anything to do with it (can change the frame rate setting if needed))
Pixel Aspect Ratio: Either Square Pixels (1.0), D1/DV NTSC (0.9), D1/DV NTSC Widescreen 16:9 (1.2), D1/DV PAL (1.067), etc...
I can also configure the DivX Codec if that helps.
Thanks in advance.
- Kariudo
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are you trying to export out of premiere and letting premiere encode your video at the same time?
if so, then that's part of your problem. Premiere pro's exporting sucks, you can usually only get good results if you export uncompressed.
the other part of your problem is divx. As far as I know, xvid is still better.
this will help you compress using xvid
(if anyone has evidence to the contrary, please tell me)
hope that helps
if so, then that's part of your problem. Premiere pro's exporting sucks, you can usually only get good results if you export uncompressed.
the other part of your problem is divx. As far as I know, xvid is still better.
this will help you compress using xvid
(if anyone has evidence to the contrary, please tell me)
hope that helps
- Keeper of Hellfire
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Re: Pixelation Problem...
This:
is responsible for thisTHE SEED wrote:Frame Rate: 29.97 (the video clips are 23 frames if that has anything to do with it (can change the frame rate setting if needed))
Don't change the framerate, unless you make a proper telecine for DVD encoding. Btw, 23 fps sounds weird. If you mean it has 23.976 fps, change it to 24 fps for editing, because Premiere can't handle this framerate correctly.THE SEED wrote:Some of the pixels are pixels from the previous frame.
- usa mimi productions
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i don't meant to hijack the thread but starting a new thread seems kind of a waste.
i am having problems with artifacts when i am exporting my raws from divx to dv. the artifacting doesnt show up until i import it into final cut pro. if it is just the format i am exporting to dv, i can just redo the conversion?
i am having problems with artifacts when i am exporting my raws from divx to dv. the artifacting doesnt show up until i import it into final cut pro. if it is just the format i am exporting to dv, i can just redo the conversion?
- Minion
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- CrackTheSky
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Although I'm not sure who Minion's talking to here, examples of what this looks like can be found here and instructions on how to remove it can be found here.Minion wrote:this is called interlacing. im too tired to give a proper explanation or post a avi script, so just run a deinterlace filter in vdub
- Qyot27
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Re: Pixelation Problem...
THE SEED wrote:Whenever I save an AMV that has been made in Adobe Premiere Pro, I always have a pixelation problem when I compress it with DivX.
Here's the settings I've been using, plus some ones I could use:
File Type: Microsoft AVI
Compressor: DivX 6.4.0 Codec (1 Logical CPU)
Frame Rate: 29.97 (the video clips are 23 frames if that has anything to do with it (can change the frame rate setting if needed))
Pixel Aspect Ratio: Either Square Pixels (1.0), D1/DV NTSC (0.9), D1/DV NTSC Widescreen 16:9 (1.2), D1/DV PAL (1.067), etc...
I can also configure the DivX Codec if that helps.
Thanks in advance.
If what you are referring to is macroblocking (i.e. a bunch of squares that show up and make the video generally look ugly) it's because of insufficient bitrate. It's usually most noticeable in high-motion areas because of the way lossy compressors (like DivX) deal with bitrate allotment. You have to raise the bitrate for them to go away - consequently this will also raise the filesize.THE SEED wrote:Sorry, forgot to say what the problem was...
Well, say if an anime character was moving, behind him or maybe around him is the odd clutter of pixels. Some of the pixels are pixels from the previous frame.
How do I get rid of that? What am I doing wrong?
As was mentioned before, XviD is generally a better choice since it can be customized more, and it's more optimized than DivX is.
- usa mimi productions
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