David Collins
September 7th, 2010, 12:33 PM
I'm using a Canon XL2 and I'm having trouble with what I believe is called aliasing -- 'blocky' horizontal lines appearing at the edges of objects, especially when they move or the camera does, and 'buzzing' diagonal lines in areas of fine detail that look like zebra stripes (though obviously aren't).
The weird thing is, the problem seems to be most pronounced when shooting in the 24p mode, which I thought was supposed to be free of any interlacing and provide a solid, film-like image. I've done a couple of tests with changes to the settings, and when the camera is set to 30p, this problem seems to mostly go away -- though when I capture the footage to Final Cut (version 7) it reappears looking just like the 24p footage. (When reviewing directly from the tape, the problem is visible in the 24p footage but not in the 30p shots...)
I've seen the same thing a lot in digital footage on line, but I've also seen some examples of footage shot on the XL2 that doesn't have any trace of this problem and looks very clear. What can I do to avoid it? Is there a setting on the camera I need to change? Might I not be capturing it to Final Cut correctly? Does drop/non-drop frame, 24p vs. 24pA, capture settings, shutter speed (I'm using 1/48), etc. have anything to do with this? Any ideas why this is happening most prominently with 24p, when that's the setting I assumed was least likely to have this problem? I can fix this to some degree by applying both Final Cut's 'anti-alias' and 'de-interlace' filters, but this reduces the sharpness of the image, and I'd like to avoid that if possible...
The weird thing is, the problem seems to be most pronounced when shooting in the 24p mode, which I thought was supposed to be free of any interlacing and provide a solid, film-like image. I've done a couple of tests with changes to the settings, and when the camera is set to 30p, this problem seems to mostly go away -- though when I capture the footage to Final Cut (version 7) it reappears looking just like the 24p footage. (When reviewing directly from the tape, the problem is visible in the 24p footage but not in the 30p shots...)
I've seen the same thing a lot in digital footage on line, but I've also seen some examples of footage shot on the XL2 that doesn't have any trace of this problem and looks very clear. What can I do to avoid it? Is there a setting on the camera I need to change? Might I not be capturing it to Final Cut correctly? Does drop/non-drop frame, 24p vs. 24pA, capture settings, shutter speed (I'm using 1/48), etc. have anything to do with this? Any ideas why this is happening most prominently with 24p, when that's the setting I assumed was least likely to have this problem? I can fix this to some degree by applying both Final Cut's 'anti-alias' and 'de-interlace' filters, but this reduces the sharpness of the image, and I'd like to avoid that if possible...