I have a problem with premieve pro 2.0. No matter what I set the video data to, the resoultion sucks and I dont understand why.
I was watching a bleach amv, and the resolution was 720-480. Then i checked my resolution and it was also set to 720-480, but still looked MUCH more blocky upon exporting. To test it I even took some clips from his video, and exported it with my settings and the resolution is SO MUCH WORSE! Can anyone tell me why my music video would look so blocky? Is there extra software i need? Because even having the settings to maximum everything produces crappy videos.
Man, two days of video editing and its making me a very sad panda because of this. I know I'll probably have to resart the entire video for a better resolution...but atleast i could get started if I found the cause of this poor resolution.
tanks for any help that can be provided.
scotty
bad resolution???
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- Joined: Wed May 17, 2006 9:41 pm
bad resolution???
i only like naruto so far...im new to anime... what else is good?
- Shazzy
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1. What program are you converting with and what settings are you using?
2. Are you using square or rectangular pixels?
2. Are you using square or rectangular pixels?
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- Qyot27
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By 'blocky' I'm assuming you mean 'horribly compressed'. If it really is a resizing problem, that's expected because Premiere's resizer blows, but to the best of my knowledge it wouldn't make it 'blocky', just distorted on the lines.
The short answer to the assumption about it being horrible compression is simple: don't use lossy codecs (that means MJPEG, DivX, XviD, Cinepak, Indeo, etc.) when exporting from Premiere. Use lossless codecs like HuffYUV or Lagarith, or even Uncompressed to export and then use an external program to convert to a different format. In other words, definitely don't use anything that has a quality setting slider bar in its configuration.
If it really is a resizing issue, make sure that the dimensions of the input clip and your export dimension settings are exactly the same.
The short answer to the assumption about it being horrible compression is simple: don't use lossy codecs (that means MJPEG, DivX, XviD, Cinepak, Indeo, etc.) when exporting from Premiere. Use lossless codecs like HuffYUV or Lagarith, or even Uncompressed to export and then use an external program to convert to a different format. In other words, definitely don't use anything that has a quality setting slider bar in its configuration.
If it really is a resizing issue, make sure that the dimensions of the input clip and your export dimension settings are exactly the same.
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