Overly saturated colors after compressing, etc.

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Corran
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Post by Corran » Sat Mar 08, 2008 9:12 am

DriftRoot wrote:Then I swiped someone else's AMV and slapped it into TMPG and I got a perfect MPEG-2. No color shift, no change in video quality - it's indistinguishable from the original. Can you hear my screams of frustration circumnavigating the globe?
What colorspace are the videos that you tried encoding with successful results?
http://avisynth.org/mediawiki/Info


Did you encode them directly or did you use an AVISynth script to frame serve them to TMPEG?

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DriftRoot
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Post by DriftRoot » Sat Mar 08, 2008 2:00 pm

The AMV that I made a nice MPEG-2 out of is YV12 and was encoded directly, no AVS file involved. I've tried encoding my own files with and without AVS scripts in both YV12 and RGB colorspaces. Same results every time.

For kicks I used that nifty Info command on both my original, uncompressed AMV file and my MPEG-2. All the values returned (that were not deliberately altered when the MPEG-2 was made) are exactly the same except for the video pitch...which has something to do with the fact that YV12 got involved in my MPEG-2 (I think). So I guess that doesn't help. :?

As an aside, the MPEG-2 is still utterly unreliable - during playback it looks terrible, but if I capture a frame it looks so close to the original footage that I actually have to hold them side by side to confirm there is a difference. And the difference is perfectly described as a "slightly warmer" color shift, which is what one person who wasn't aware there's a "problem" with my MPEG-2 said is all he noticed, insofar as my MP4 and my MPEG-2 not matching goes. Slightly warmer is fantastic, unfortunately it can also turn out broiled!!

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Seijin_Dinger
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Post by Seijin_Dinger » Sat Mar 08, 2008 2:41 pm

it had the slightly warmer look on my computer monitors as well as the 52 inch plasma screen TV we did the screening on last weekend. I think it should be fine once it hits DVD on the large rear projection screens
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DriftRoot
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Post by DriftRoot » Sat Mar 08, 2008 5:13 pm

Seijin_Dinger wrote:it had the slightly warmer look on my computer monitors as well as the 52 inch plasma screen TV we did the screening on last weekend. I think it should be fine once it hits DVD on the large rear projection screens
I love that word "slightly." That's just an awesome word. Particularly coming from you. :D No worries about trying to re-encode it then, I'm fine with a slightly warmer version. ^_^

Thank you again, everyone, for offering advice and information on this problem. I would still like to know what the heck is wrong, but aside from getting a new computer (which I'd like to do within the year anyways) I kind of doubt the problem's going to go away.
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