J. Stephen McDonald
October 11th, 2006, 03:59 AM
I've been trying to capture some still images from pre-recorded DV tape onto a MemoryStick, using my VX2100. I've determined that the results of this will be mostly mediocre, at best. However, when I've directly captured stills from the VX2100 camera onto the MemoryStick, most of them look very good, considering that they have just a 640 X 480 pixel-size and use an average of 175 Kb.
The difference is that those taken from tape have been encoded and compressed for DV and then recompressed a second time for the J-PEG images. This double-compression badly degrades the quality. Also, when a VX2100 (and some other similar models) are in direct-capture memory mode, they use progressive scan and a fast mechanical shutter. I'm going to be snapping even more memory-mode stills along with my video tape footage, as this small pixel-size is very useful on the Internet.
I've included two sets of comparison shots. They show the same birds at the same times, although not in identical poses. The pixel-size is the same for all, although the memory mode pictures have a slightly larger bit-size. When the pictures are expanded to full-size, the difference in quality is even more pronounced. They show two hybrid geese, which are crosses between Canada and domestic Greylag Geese. If I had to tell you which are from tape and which are captured camera-direct, my thesis here would be invalid.
The difference is that those taken from tape have been encoded and compressed for DV and then recompressed a second time for the J-PEG images. This double-compression badly degrades the quality. Also, when a VX2100 (and some other similar models) are in direct-capture memory mode, they use progressive scan and a fast mechanical shutter. I'm going to be snapping even more memory-mode stills along with my video tape footage, as this small pixel-size is very useful on the Internet.
I've included two sets of comparison shots. They show the same birds at the same times, although not in identical poses. The pixel-size is the same for all, although the memory mode pictures have a slightly larger bit-size. When the pictures are expanded to full-size, the difference in quality is even more pronounced. They show two hybrid geese, which are crosses between Canada and domestic Greylag Geese. If I had to tell you which are from tape and which are captured camera-direct, my thesis here would be invalid.