Anthony Marotti
March 31st, 2008, 03:42 AM
Hello All,
I mostly direct and I haven't shot for a while, but I'm doing a few interviews myself and have a question.
I framed my shot perfectly in the viewfinder and when I captured my footage (test footage) into SC3 and used the overscan mask on the preview monitor (in CS3, not external) the image was full frame, in other words, the top of the subjects head was out of the allowable area.
I thought that if you framed your shot perfectly, it would be perfect for TV viewing, and if viewed on a computer you would get more information i.e. you would see things that were out of frame.
If you are framing for the computers full frame, then why don't they have an overlay or mask so that you can frame for TV. After all, we use to shoot mainly for broadcast, not for viewing on computers.
If you have to guess what the TV viewers are going to see, how can you accurately frame a shot??
Thanks Much !!!
AM
I mostly direct and I haven't shot for a while, but I'm doing a few interviews myself and have a question.
I framed my shot perfectly in the viewfinder and when I captured my footage (test footage) into SC3 and used the overscan mask on the preview monitor (in CS3, not external) the image was full frame, in other words, the top of the subjects head was out of the allowable area.
I thought that if you framed your shot perfectly, it would be perfect for TV viewing, and if viewed on a computer you would get more information i.e. you would see things that were out of frame.
If you are framing for the computers full frame, then why don't they have an overlay or mask so that you can frame for TV. After all, we use to shoot mainly for broadcast, not for viewing on computers.
If you have to guess what the TV viewers are going to see, how can you accurately frame a shot??
Thanks Much !!!
AM