For my setup what order do I convert colorspace?
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- Joined: Mon Aug 11, 2003 3:31 pm
For my setup what order do I convert colorspace?
I have been reading alot of the FAQ's all day and I just bought my first dvd-ram drive (good bye stone age).
So I ripped my first dvd and extracted a clip using the vic bond tutorial.
In this tutorial it says to use the huffyuv 2.1.1 codec to extract individual clips from the "master" divx file (avi containing entire movie) to pass off to primiere.
However I thought Premiere uses the RGB 24 bit color space? how will this effect the clip I just extracted using huffyuv 2.1.1?
So I ripped my first dvd and extracted a clip using the vic bond tutorial.
In this tutorial it says to use the huffyuv 2.1.1 codec to extract individual clips from the "master" divx file (avi containing entire movie) to pass off to primiere.
However I thought Premiere uses the RGB 24 bit color space? how will this effect the clip I just extracted using huffyuv 2.1.1?
haro haro haro
- Scintilla
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Re: For my setup what order do I convert colorspace?
/me tries to suppress the murderous urges.fonque wrote:I have been reading alot of the FAQ's all day and I just bought my first dvd-ram drive (good bye stone age).
So I ripped my first dvd and extracted a clip using the <b>vic bond tutorial.</b>
In this tutorial it says to use the huffyuv 2.1.1 codec to extract individual clips from the <b>"master" divx file (avi containing entire movie)</b> to pass off to primiere.
It shouldn't make a difference. Since DivX uses a YUV colorspace, HuffYUV will encode your clips in YUY2 mode. Premiere should then convert that to RGB internally without your having to do anything.fonque wrote:However I thought Premiere uses the RGB 24 bit color space? how will this effect the clip I just extracted using huffyuv 2.1.1?
But if you do have a problem, make sure the "Always suggest RGB mode for output" box is checked in your HuffYUV codec options.
- DJ_Izumi
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Well, YUV -> YUV2 -> RGB still adds unnecessary loss in color space conversion.
However HuffYUV can also do RGB color space, larger file but no color second color space conversion when going into premiere.
But I'd suggest using Lagarith Lossless over HuffYUV. It compresses more, has a butt load of color space options and is just as idiot proof. You can save space and lose nothing by going from YUV(DivX) -> YUV(Lagarith)-> RGB(Premiere)
Though there's still the unavoidable conversion going into Premiere. And if you're not doing 'Fast Recompress' in Virtualdub it'll do a YUV -> RGB -> YUV conversion anyway.
Personally I just make everything RGB for simplicity. >.<
However HuffYUV can also do RGB color space, larger file but no color second color space conversion when going into premiere.
But I'd suggest using Lagarith Lossless over HuffYUV. It compresses more, has a butt load of color space options and is just as idiot proof. You can save space and lose nothing by going from YUV(DivX) -> YUV(Lagarith)-> RGB(Premiere)
Though there's still the unavoidable conversion going into Premiere. And if you're not doing 'Fast Recompress' in Virtualdub it'll do a YUV -> RGB -> YUV conversion anyway.
Personally I just make everything RGB for simplicity. >.<
- Scintilla
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I should have mentioned that you'll want to use VirtualDubMod's "Fast recompress" option to make sure it doesn't convert to RGB in between.
<b>YUV</b> is a general category of colorspaces, like RGB.
<b>YUY2</b> and <b>YV12</b> are such colorspaces. DivX uses YV12, which stores half as much chroma information per frame as YUY2.
Now then: YV12 -> YUY2 shouldn't result in any loss at all, and YUY2 -> RGB <i>is</i> necessary, because the popular NLEs all seem to work in RGB internally.
For clarification:DJ_Izumi wrote:Well, YUV -> YUV2 -> RGB still adds unnecessary loss in color space conversion.
<b>YUV</b> is a general category of colorspaces, like RGB.
<b>YUY2</b> and <b>YV12</b> are such colorspaces. DivX uses YV12, which stores half as much chroma information per frame as YUY2.
Now then: YV12 -> YUY2 shouldn't result in any loss at all, and YUY2 -> RGB <i>is</i> necessary, because the popular NLEs all seem to work in RGB internally.
Even if you give it YUV data? I've always heard that if you feed HuffYUV YV12 or YUY2 video (making sure to use VDubMod's Fast recompress, or course), it'll compress in YUY2 mode no matter what settings you choose. But there's still a YUV -> RGB conversion in the process, so I don't see how this would help.DJ_Izumi wrote:However HuffYUV can also do RGB color space, larger file but no color second color space conversion when going into premiere.
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- Joined: Mon Aug 11, 2003 3:31 pm
Scintilla, whats the murdurous rage about?
So if I have the info from all of your posts right,
(movie) divx YV12 -> (clips) HuffYUV 2.1.1 YUV2 -> RGB (editing)
and DJ_Izumi you suggest using Lagarith to replace the HuffYUV?
Where can I download that codec?
Are there any better codecs to use instead of divx 6.whatever Im using for encoding the entire movie from the DVD?
So if I have the info from all of your posts right,
(movie) divx YV12 -> (clips) HuffYUV 2.1.1 YUV2 -> RGB (editing)
and DJ_Izumi you suggest using Lagarith to replace the HuffYUV?
Where can I download that codec?
Are there any better codecs to use instead of divx 6.whatever Im using for encoding the entire movie from the DVD?
haro haro haro
- DJ_Izumi
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- Scintilla
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The fact that Vic would suggest in his guide to compress your entire disc to DivX before cutting clips from it. Unless you're seriously pressed for hard drive space, there's no reason to throw in a lossy conversion that early in the process -- it's an unnecessary quality hit that'll only be compounded later when you have to compress the video again for online distribution.fonque wrote:Scintilla, whats the murdurous rage about?
But then, I am a stickler for things like this, and most people probably won't notice the difference in the finished product. So.
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- NeoQuixotic
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Make your clips from the AviSynth scripts. You don't need to create another encoding of the DVD. And if you don't have a lot of hard drive space then save up for a new larger one. Hard drives are cheap nowadays .
As for the Lagarith Lossless codec:
http://lags.leetcode.net/codec.html
As for the Lagarith Lossless codec:
http://lags.leetcode.net/codec.html
Insert clever text/image here.
- Willen
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Since part of the steps outlined by VicBond007 is making Huffyuv clips from those DivX files, why not skip the DVD to DivX conversion and make the clips directly from the DVD VOB files? It will save you the time you'd have spent converting everything to DivX, plus you don't have to hunt for and install DivX 4.12 (or DivX 5/6 or whatever).
So:
Rip DVD to hard drive.
Create D2V file with DGIndex.
Make or modify AVS script with de-interlacing and clean-up filters.
Load AVS into VirtualDubMod.
Create Huffyuv (or Lagarith) clips.
Import clips into your editing program.
????????
Profit.
So:
Rip DVD to hard drive.
Create D2V file with DGIndex.
Make or modify AVS script with de-interlacing and clean-up filters.
Load AVS into VirtualDubMod.
Create Huffyuv (or Lagarith) clips.
Import clips into your editing program.
????????
Profit.