View Full Version : 1080i and progressive post & slowmo


Peter Svensson
February 15th, 2008, 11:17 PM
Hey guys,

Ok, I am about to start filming a windsurfing movie. Its going to be filmed with a Canon XHA1 and a HV20. It will be recorded as 1080i in both cases.

The biggest problem I have is that windsurfing action contains extremly high motion in the photage. Moving ocean, fast tricks, zooming etc.

I will do a lot of slowmotion in post.

The final output needs to be suitable for both TV and Internet, 2 different exports of course. I do not really care if the final TV version is SD instead of HD. This is since I beliave that scaleing down a de-interlaced file must look better.

My question is now which workflow I should use.

Premiere, AE are the programs
Plugins: Twixtor, fieldskit, cineform (maybe a decklink extreme, what u think?).

Import as 1280x720i (cineform) edit everything as interlace throughout all production, and then scale down for and de-interlace for Internet, and also on scale down (but keep interlace) for TV? Problem is that Twixtor works better with progressiv raw material.
And in that case, how the hell do I do a good de-interlacing? My high motion photage is very hard to deinterlace. Is interpolate the only way, and in that case where and how do I do it the best.

I tried to capture with cineform as 1280x720P but that de-interlace uses blendmode as de-interlace and it happens way too much between my frames, so if I pause and check a frame it is all blury.

Anybody with some good ideas?

Thanks

Peter

Eelco Romeijn
February 23rd, 2008, 05:38 AM
Hi Peter,

If you can afford one, try a Matrox RTX2 HD board. It makes really nice slowmo's with interpolation and does that in realtime, even in HD.

It really benefits to HD editing, scaling and exporting.
It give's you realtime full HD monitoring on a inexpensive 24" LCD screen through DVI and you can also monitor on a normal LCD tv through the analogue component breakoutbox.

Check matrox website for more details.

Herman Van Deventer
February 23rd, 2008, 07:20 AM
Peter,

I am using AE with excellent results from my XLH1 : Shoot 1080i import
into AE as 1080i / When dropped in Comp the footage will be housed as P(F)

Use the standard time stretch tool and output as P.

Obviously the correct shutter speed will contribute.