Christopher Najewicz
October 7th, 2004, 08:23 AM
Hi,
I have a project which I've been editing in Premiere Pro, I shot it all on a Canon GL-2, and it's of a band. There were some very low light situations, but I had read on this forum how people said not to use the gain in the camera, so I tried to minimize it.
Anyhow, I have a T.V. next to my computer, with the video going out from Premiere. It looks decent enough.
Next I frameserved my video to CCE (2.67), I followed the guide at doom9.org on encoding, and set the offset line to 1, as my frameserved video was being served as BFF (bottom field first).
Anyhow, I burned a quick test DVD, and it looks terrible. There is a TON of "snow" in all my dark scenes, even the ones where I didn't use much if any gain. There's an interview section that was shot outside on a very sunny day, and though none of the footage is overexposed, the encoder has seemed to "block" the colors, and it doesn't look high quality at all.
So I thought it might be the frameserver (debugmode for Premiere), and just exported my video to .AVI and encoded it again, it's still looks crappy.
One more thought is that I have 2 T.V.'s I've been testing this on, one is a 27" flat screen panasonic, and on this the DVD looks terrible, on a smaller 19" T.V. I don't seem to have the same issues. Is it possible that the white-enhancing thing on my Panasonic is screwed up (they call it "picture", but I've been having to turn it off on regular DVDs too, but i've never seen "snow" like this)?
Anyhow, I swear I burned a earlier cut of my film to DVD and it looked fine.. but I don't have that DVD anymore.
Thanks for any guesses to what's going on because it has me scratching my head.
I have a project which I've been editing in Premiere Pro, I shot it all on a Canon GL-2, and it's of a band. There were some very low light situations, but I had read on this forum how people said not to use the gain in the camera, so I tried to minimize it.
Anyhow, I have a T.V. next to my computer, with the video going out from Premiere. It looks decent enough.
Next I frameserved my video to CCE (2.67), I followed the guide at doom9.org on encoding, and set the offset line to 1, as my frameserved video was being served as BFF (bottom field first).
Anyhow, I burned a quick test DVD, and it looks terrible. There is a TON of "snow" in all my dark scenes, even the ones where I didn't use much if any gain. There's an interview section that was shot outside on a very sunny day, and though none of the footage is overexposed, the encoder has seemed to "block" the colors, and it doesn't look high quality at all.
So I thought it might be the frameserver (debugmode for Premiere), and just exported my video to .AVI and encoded it again, it's still looks crappy.
One more thought is that I have 2 T.V.'s I've been testing this on, one is a 27" flat screen panasonic, and on this the DVD looks terrible, on a smaller 19" T.V. I don't seem to have the same issues. Is it possible that the white-enhancing thing on my Panasonic is screwed up (they call it "picture", but I've been having to turn it off on regular DVDs too, but i've never seen "snow" like this)?
Anyhow, I swear I burned a earlier cut of my film to DVD and it looked fine.. but I don't have that DVD anymore.
Thanks for any guesses to what's going on because it has me scratching my head.