Aspect ratio help needed
- Knightfire
- Joined: Sun May 16, 2004 2:57 pm
- Location: San Jose, CA
Aspect ratio help needed
So I'm in the middle of correcting the aspect ratio of my recent video and I have ran in to a sort of brick wall. Put it shortly, I don't know what Aspect ratio I should put my footage in. Following VicBond007's guide, I should put it at 720 wide with 540 tall including the black bars. Another user on the site Said Elfen Lied (The anime I used for my video) should be at a ratio of 848x480. So I made screen caps of the same frame done at two different ratios.
Here's the screencap at 720x540
Here's the screencap at 848x540
What I need to know is:
1) For the 848 width, what is the correct vertical including blackbars?
2)which is the prefered spect ratio, in your opinion?
Thanks in advance.
Here's the screencap at 720x540
Here's the screencap at 848x540
What I need to know is:
1) For the 848 width, what is the correct vertical including blackbars?
2)which is the prefered spect ratio, in your opinion?
Thanks in advance.
- BasharOfTheAges
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From a quick glance it seems the 720x540 looks correct and the 848x540 would be the same AR if you cropped off the black and did the actual image at that resolution - i'm no expert though, and since i'm at work i don't even have the tools to check any of that out =/
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On the DVDs, Elfen Lied is stored as 720x480 with an anamorphic flag (I'm assuming these are either the American or Japanese discs; hopefully the European release is anamorphic as well, if there is a European release?) - thus, just stretch the width from 720 to 848 and leave it alone, or resize proportionally from 848x480 to a smaller resolution and add black borders (or just leave it alone).
For instance, 640x352 (this one isn't exactly 16:9 but it would be the proper resolution for encoding hard letterboxing for DVD since the image itself and both of the borders would be multiples of 16).
However, if you are dealing with an MPEG-1 or MPEG-2 file, then there isn't any reencoding necessary to correct the issue. Demux the streams with TMPGEnc, get ahold of a program called ReStream, and run the .m1v (or .m2v, whichever you have) through it, specifying it to have a 16:9 flag. Then remux the fixed video stream with the audio stream and voila. I always use ReStream to make things anamorphic since I don't trust TMPGEnc to do it correctly - not to mention it's easier to figure out; I could never get TMPGEnc's settings right during the encode.
For instance, 640x352 (this one isn't exactly 16:9 but it would be the proper resolution for encoding hard letterboxing for DVD since the image itself and both of the borders would be multiples of 16).
However, if you are dealing with an MPEG-1 or MPEG-2 file, then there isn't any reencoding necessary to correct the issue. Demux the streams with TMPGEnc, get ahold of a program called ReStream, and run the .m1v (or .m2v, whichever you have) through it, specifying it to have a 16:9 flag. Then remux the fixed video stream with the audio stream and voila. I always use ReStream to make things anamorphic since I don't trust TMPGEnc to do it correctly - not to mention it's easier to figure out; I could never get TMPGEnc's settings right during the encode.