Andreas Fernbrant
April 5th, 2003, 07:48 PM
Ok, I don't really know how to put this questions I can't even figure out how to ask it in my native language.
I will try and if you don't understand I will try to put the question in another way.
I'm making a extremesports gymnastic/acrobatic DVD and I'm playing around with the 16:9 and 4:3 format. When I capture widescreen video it has the same ratio, 720x576 (PAL) but diffrent pixel aspect ratio then ordinary 4:3 video have. (so it looked squashed. No problem with that, Because when I load it in to Premere or Vegas it converts it so that it looks okay. I figured if I send that squashed signal to a television, (4:3) what would happen? So I borrowed a 4:3 television and hooked it up, Yup! as I thought.. the picture was squashed. So I now know that if you send a widescreen signal to a 4:3 television it still squashes the image. I don't get the black borders up and down. Is this because the pixel aspect ratio? If I'm not able to use the "widescreen" feature in Premiere or Vegas and render it out to a 4:3 tv with border and fullscreen on a widescreen television, why do the programs have the feature? Do I have to render the borders manually? So the actual file has the black saved as information? What if I render the file as a 16:9 format? like 720x405? (or what the correct format would be?) What would happen then? If I put a DVD disc in my dvd player it gives me black borders up and down on my television. Great! If I put it in my computer I see a videofile with a widescreen/cinemascope ratio and no renderd black bars up and down? What happens if you shoot 16:9 on your camera and hooks it up to a 4:3 television? Correct ratio (borders) or squashed?
So my question comes down to this, What is the correct way to get widescreen format on a widescreen tv and borders on a 4:3 tv? To render them out (borders) or to stick with the "squashed widescreen" because the dvd player gives it the correct ratio?
(and it's my editing soultion that tricks me)
My last question, When you open a dvd in your computer, it has a higher resolution then dv. I mean the DVD are higher then 720 (standard DV) Yeah I know the diffrence and I know why and what. What I don't know is why they do the DVD with that higher resolution.
Well, this message took me a lot of time to write but I don't know if someone will understand my questions. I have a really hard time to explain my problem.
/Andreas
I will try and if you don't understand I will try to put the question in another way.
I'm making a extremesports gymnastic/acrobatic DVD and I'm playing around with the 16:9 and 4:3 format. When I capture widescreen video it has the same ratio, 720x576 (PAL) but diffrent pixel aspect ratio then ordinary 4:3 video have. (so it looked squashed. No problem with that, Because when I load it in to Premere or Vegas it converts it so that it looks okay. I figured if I send that squashed signal to a television, (4:3) what would happen? So I borrowed a 4:3 television and hooked it up, Yup! as I thought.. the picture was squashed. So I now know that if you send a widescreen signal to a 4:3 television it still squashes the image. I don't get the black borders up and down. Is this because the pixel aspect ratio? If I'm not able to use the "widescreen" feature in Premiere or Vegas and render it out to a 4:3 tv with border and fullscreen on a widescreen television, why do the programs have the feature? Do I have to render the borders manually? So the actual file has the black saved as information? What if I render the file as a 16:9 format? like 720x405? (or what the correct format would be?) What would happen then? If I put a DVD disc in my dvd player it gives me black borders up and down on my television. Great! If I put it in my computer I see a videofile with a widescreen/cinemascope ratio and no renderd black bars up and down? What happens if you shoot 16:9 on your camera and hooks it up to a 4:3 television? Correct ratio (borders) or squashed?
So my question comes down to this, What is the correct way to get widescreen format on a widescreen tv and borders on a 4:3 tv? To render them out (borders) or to stick with the "squashed widescreen" because the dvd player gives it the correct ratio?
(and it's my editing soultion that tricks me)
My last question, When you open a dvd in your computer, it has a higher resolution then dv. I mean the DVD are higher then 720 (standard DV) Yeah I know the diffrence and I know why and what. What I don't know is why they do the DVD with that higher resolution.
Well, this message took me a lot of time to write but I don't know if someone will understand my questions. I have a really hard time to explain my problem.
/Andreas