Wayne Greensill
June 24th, 2007, 12:15 PM
Hi Guys
Got a new guy working with me and got him to do a few shots at the brides house.
The problem is when he has attached the external mic to the camera, he hasn't brought the bracket back further enough, the mic is on, so you can see the mic's wind shield in the frame.
How is the best way to get rid of this?
Is it best to zoom in slightly when I come to edit it in PP2?
Hope you can help.
Many thanks
Wayne
Richard Wakefield
June 24th, 2007, 01:48 PM
do not, i repeat DO NOT zoom in, it'll be slightly blurry in the end result as you're decreasing the resolution.
what i would personally do is crop the top, then move the clip up to centre it on screen. that way it will look like a deliberate widescreen effect.
or if it's a static shot, take a frame grab, clone some of the 'ceiling' in photoshop and bring back into PP2 your new cover-up layer (a bit more time-consuming but definitely do-able..i speak from experience: there was an unwanted cup of tea in the foreground of a corporate video!)
Zach Stewart
June 24th, 2007, 01:50 PM
Is the footage 4x3? maybe you could possibly put a 16x9 mask onto the footage to make it letterboxed....but you would probably cut off important areas of the video. probably best bet is to zoom in but then you will loose some of the quality if you go too far in. best of luck.
Wayne Greensill
June 24th, 2007, 02:45 PM
Thanks Guys
Looks like im gonna have to have a play around with it
Brian Peterson
June 24th, 2007, 05:42 PM
If you know anyone with Newtek's SpeedEDIT, ask them to do a zoom in on the clips and render out. I find SpeedEDIT's ability to uprez far better than PPros.
Alfred Diaz
June 24th, 2007, 05:53 PM
Just thought I would clarify, whether you zoom in (increase the scale of your image), use a 16:9 mask, or just crop the top and bottom, it all does essentially the same: you are cutting out part of the original image.
I would go with the crop tool and try to find a creative background if it is too large a section for viewing.
AD
Peter Jefferson
June 24th, 2007, 07:50 PM
if its 16:9, use a 1.85.1 mask
if its 4:3, use a 16x9 mask
worst case scenario, crop and zoom, but this is dependant on your camera, and your output.
Dont forget most cameras record footage in the non safe area, which u can explioit. BUT on a projector it IS visible (non safe zones that is), but bezelled out on aplasma or standard TV.