Re: creating DVD
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Well done. As far as quality goes the first things I would look at are:
Did you start with a DV-AVI? Testing I just did proves to me that DV-AVI is
still the way to go.
How long is the video? Maybe it's too long and your having to adjust
settings too much to make it fit on the DVD.
There, of course, are other things but these two are usually the big ones.
"mick" <micwil@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:db3v2p$7o8$1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Thanks wojo and others-finally got DVD to play on TV-now need to improve
> quality.
> mick
>
.
Relevant Pages
- Re: Burn to DVD - movie Not Clear
... Firewire is definitely better to use and you will get a higher quality video ... Then save as a DV-AVI since your plan is to go to DVD. ... (microsoft.public.windowsxp.moviemaker) - Re: What will it look like on my TV?
... that NON DV-AVI formats produced a lot of ruined blanks for me. ... > You are correct the difference between a high quality NTSC file and a DV-AVI ... > I ran a test using a 2:16 video. ... > but I save al the pictures and every time I have enough to fill a DVD disk I ... (microsoft.public.windowsxp.moviemaker) - Re: Burning a DVD
... there's a fixed resolution to DV-AVI files... ... that'll be done by your DVD software. ... I've saved the project quite a few times to see the quality, ... (microsoft.public.windowsxp.moviemaker) - Re: Burning to sonic 5.3
... What format did you capture your video? ... If you are saving to DV-AVI, ... DV-AVI can't improve the quality. ... >> You need to create a DVD project... ... (microsoft.public.windowsxp.moviemaker) - Re: What will it look like on my TV?
... You are correct the difference between a high quality NTSC file and a DV-AVI ... burn them to DVD and see what I get there to decide for certain. ... but I save al the pictures and every time I have enough to fill a DVD disk I ... (microsoft.public.windowsxp.moviemaker) |
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