Steven Fokkinga
December 3rd, 2004, 05:44 AM
Hi all. I've been experiencing a very strange problem after editing my first short: after I had exported it from premiere and played it back with media player, it looked a bit darker than it should be. It also had a sort of more saturated look.
Now the strange thing is, if I open up another media player and put the exact same file into this, it plays back the file as it was intented, so less dark and less over-saturated. Note that this effect is not extremely obvious, that's why I didn't really notice until I shot some low-light scenes. With the 'first' media player I really couldn't see much and with the second it was ok.
Now the reason why I put this thread here and not in the sony camera-section (I have a vx1000) or the premiere section is because I discovered that it does this to all my video files, so also the movies I have on my HDD give this effect. It isn't too apparant if you just put on one screen, but with the comparison to the second MP the difference is clearly visible.
The big problem with this is that this way I'm not sure what my final product will look like, which is off course unaccaptable. Mind that I have this problem with all formats (avi and mpg, etc.) and with all players (MP classic, MP9, VLC-player, etc.), so I'm thinking of a hardware problem.
Does any of this make sense to anyone?
Steven
Now the strange thing is, if I open up another media player and put the exact same file into this, it plays back the file as it was intented, so less dark and less over-saturated. Note that this effect is not extremely obvious, that's why I didn't really notice until I shot some low-light scenes. With the 'first' media player I really couldn't see much and with the second it was ok.
Now the reason why I put this thread here and not in the sony camera-section (I have a vx1000) or the premiere section is because I discovered that it does this to all my video files, so also the movies I have on my HDD give this effect. It isn't too apparant if you just put on one screen, but with the comparison to the second MP the difference is clearly visible.
The big problem with this is that this way I'm not sure what my final product will look like, which is off course unaccaptable. Mind that I have this problem with all formats (avi and mpg, etc.) and with all players (MP classic, MP9, VLC-player, etc.), so I'm thinking of a hardware problem.
Does any of this make sense to anyone?
Steven