Ben Buie
August 22nd, 2004, 02:19 PM
For those thinking about getting into HDV production, here is a rundown of the entire editing process that we use (for widescreen DVD output) along with the software:
Software
----
Capture/Conversion - Cineform HD-Link (ConnectHD)
Editing - Sony Vegas 4
Chroma-Noise Reduction - VirtualDub
MPEG-2 Encoding - Canopus ProCoder
DVD Authoring - Adobe Encore
1) Use HD-Link to capture M2T files from HD-10 - these files are roughly 19Mbps
2) Convert M2T files to Cineform HD AVIs using HDLink (ConnectHD) - these files are roughly 40 Mbps, but they very greatly in size based on scene complexity
3) Edit in Vegas
4) Render the final edit out to a Cineform HD AVI (final.avi) file - the rendering time varies greatly based on transitions, effects, etc.
5) Run the final.avi file through VirtualDub (using the Chroma Noise and Temporal Smoother filters). On our Athlon XP 2000+ machine this process runs at 4fps. We typically name this file something like final-corrected.avi. The output of this process is again a Cineform HD AVI file.
6) Use ProCoder to encode the MPEG2 file for the DVD. We use the Mastering Quality, 16:9, progressive scan, 8 Mbps settings. Basically the maximum quality settings for a DVD. Warning, this will only fit about an hour on a DVD, if you want more lower the bitrate. ProCoder is fast, this runs at about 6 fps on our Athlon XP 2000 machine. The output from ProCoder is hard to beat for DVDs. The final DVD output file is final_DVD.mpg.
7) Pull the final_DVD.mpg file into Adobe Encore, put together your DVD layout, and burn a DVD.
The results are pretty amazing, even when blown up to large screens. We have a place to play our DVDs on a 100" home theater screen nearby (480p), and it simply blows away anything we have seen shot on a DV camera (although we haven't seen any XL2 16:9 30p footage on it yet).
I think two of the factors that really help things include:
1) The footage is never interlaced at any point in the chain.
2) All the editing is done in a high bitrate / low compression format. The Cineform HD AVI format is an awesome editing format, a perfect compromise between file size, quality, and editing performance.
I hope this helps anyone thinking about getting into video production using HDV.
Regards,
Ben Buie
Software
----
Capture/Conversion - Cineform HD-Link (ConnectHD)
Editing - Sony Vegas 4
Chroma-Noise Reduction - VirtualDub
MPEG-2 Encoding - Canopus ProCoder
DVD Authoring - Adobe Encore
1) Use HD-Link to capture M2T files from HD-10 - these files are roughly 19Mbps
2) Convert M2T files to Cineform HD AVIs using HDLink (ConnectHD) - these files are roughly 40 Mbps, but they very greatly in size based on scene complexity
3) Edit in Vegas
4) Render the final edit out to a Cineform HD AVI (final.avi) file - the rendering time varies greatly based on transitions, effects, etc.
5) Run the final.avi file through VirtualDub (using the Chroma Noise and Temporal Smoother filters). On our Athlon XP 2000+ machine this process runs at 4fps. We typically name this file something like final-corrected.avi. The output of this process is again a Cineform HD AVI file.
6) Use ProCoder to encode the MPEG2 file for the DVD. We use the Mastering Quality, 16:9, progressive scan, 8 Mbps settings. Basically the maximum quality settings for a DVD. Warning, this will only fit about an hour on a DVD, if you want more lower the bitrate. ProCoder is fast, this runs at about 6 fps on our Athlon XP 2000 machine. The output from ProCoder is hard to beat for DVDs. The final DVD output file is final_DVD.mpg.
7) Pull the final_DVD.mpg file into Adobe Encore, put together your DVD layout, and burn a DVD.
The results are pretty amazing, even when blown up to large screens. We have a place to play our DVDs on a 100" home theater screen nearby (480p), and it simply blows away anything we have seen shot on a DV camera (although we haven't seen any XL2 16:9 30p footage on it yet).
I think two of the factors that really help things include:
1) The footage is never interlaced at any point in the chain.
2) All the editing is done in a high bitrate / low compression format. The Cineform HD AVI format is an awesome editing format, a perfect compromise between file size, quality, and editing performance.
I hope this helps anyone thinking about getting into video production using HDV.
Regards,
Ben Buie