Marty Baggen
August 10th, 2006, 07:37 AM
With all the negative chatter on several forums about the Cineframe function of the Sony Z1U, I never really thought seriously about shooting in the CF mode and thereby committing my footage to an inferior image.
I ran across a few old posts, mainly from Shannon Rawls about his success with CF, so I was re-inspired to explore the possibilities.
With some extra time on my hands yesterday, I went out and shot some random footage yesterday at a park (man swinging a metal detector, a guy tossing a frisbee, and sparkling rapid river water) in CF30. I won't be transferring anything to film, so something that would produce a progressive image for computer viewing is my primary goal.
With David's help, I set my Cineform capture parameters and captured via Premiere 2.0.
I then exported to Premiere's preset for WMV720p. The stuff looks amazing. Beautifully crisp frames, smooth-as-interlaced playback....gorgeous.
I understand I am losing some resolution with CF, but I must say, it can't be a lot. Perhaps going to 720 compensates for some of the resolution loss?
So a few questions for the esteemed group:
1 - what should I export if I want an SD DVD from this footage
2 - what settings should I use to export back to tape
(the Sony is an interlaced device, so I am uncertain on this)
3 - To establish my Cineform settings, I simply selected CF24 as a new project, then edited the framerate. I captured with Cineform in both interlaced and progressive, and it didn't seem to make a visual difference, although the progressive files were smaller. I would love to see a flowchart of what is happening to the interlacing as various modes of capture and export are utilized. It's one of those things that I can't get my head around.
David, thanks for your guidance on this process that you shared a month or so ago. At this point, with much of my work going to Powerpoint presentations and computer-based viewing, CF30 seems to be a really solid solution when used in tandem with Cineform.
Marty
OnQ Film
I ran across a few old posts, mainly from Shannon Rawls about his success with CF, so I was re-inspired to explore the possibilities.
With some extra time on my hands yesterday, I went out and shot some random footage yesterday at a park (man swinging a metal detector, a guy tossing a frisbee, and sparkling rapid river water) in CF30. I won't be transferring anything to film, so something that would produce a progressive image for computer viewing is my primary goal.
With David's help, I set my Cineform capture parameters and captured via Premiere 2.0.
I then exported to Premiere's preset for WMV720p. The stuff looks amazing. Beautifully crisp frames, smooth-as-interlaced playback....gorgeous.
I understand I am losing some resolution with CF, but I must say, it can't be a lot. Perhaps going to 720 compensates for some of the resolution loss?
So a few questions for the esteemed group:
1 - what should I export if I want an SD DVD from this footage
2 - what settings should I use to export back to tape
(the Sony is an interlaced device, so I am uncertain on this)
3 - To establish my Cineform settings, I simply selected CF24 as a new project, then edited the framerate. I captured with Cineform in both interlaced and progressive, and it didn't seem to make a visual difference, although the progressive files were smaller. I would love to see a flowchart of what is happening to the interlacing as various modes of capture and export are utilized. It's one of those things that I can't get my head around.
David, thanks for your guidance on this process that you shared a month or so ago. At this point, with much of my work going to Powerpoint presentations and computer-based viewing, CF30 seems to be a really solid solution when used in tandem with Cineform.
Marty
OnQ Film