Steve Wolla
September 14th, 2008, 10:25 AM
I shoot with a Canon XHA1 and edit in Premiere Pro CS3. A very good combination, to be sure.
But now I have shot a medical program that I produce, in HDV and need to broadcast in SD in a 4:3 format. So far I have not found a way to down convert from HDV 16:9 to SD 4:3, either in-cam or in Premiere.
It's in Farsi and the final product is for broadcast to Afghanistan.
I also have another issue that is driving me crazy on a similar project. This one is meant to stay in the 16:9 format, and is in English.
I shoot a doctor in her home office, and she has several degrees on the wall behind her. We shot our last show in HD, 16:9 format. Looks good, very sharp, except that there are several reflections in the glass of the degree frames that are very annoying.
Is there a way to eliminate or reduce this glare in Premiere, or can the offending clips be uploaded to Photoshop and fixed there? I have been researching this topic a lot but have come up basically empty-handed.
Would it be possible to use Tiffen's new filtering program--either in Premiere or Photoshop and apply a polarizer effect to it? Does anyone have any experience with this program, and is it useable with Premiere?
Any help on tese issues would certainly be appreciated
Thanks in advance!
SW
But now I have shot a medical program that I produce, in HDV and need to broadcast in SD in a 4:3 format. So far I have not found a way to down convert from HDV 16:9 to SD 4:3, either in-cam or in Premiere.
It's in Farsi and the final product is for broadcast to Afghanistan.
I also have another issue that is driving me crazy on a similar project. This one is meant to stay in the 16:9 format, and is in English.
I shoot a doctor in her home office, and she has several degrees on the wall behind her. We shot our last show in HD, 16:9 format. Looks good, very sharp, except that there are several reflections in the glass of the degree frames that are very annoying.
Is there a way to eliminate or reduce this glare in Premiere, or can the offending clips be uploaded to Photoshop and fixed there? I have been researching this topic a lot but have come up basically empty-handed.
Would it be possible to use Tiffen's new filtering program--either in Premiere or Photoshop and apply a polarizer effect to it? Does anyone have any experience with this program, and is it useable with Premiere?
Any help on tese issues would certainly be appreciated
Thanks in advance!
SW