HELP !!!
As anyone who knows me will verify I am technically ignorant about my hobby. Which proves you can sometimes succeed on instinct. However occasionally it is essential to get correct information. An AV maker is willing to give me a video DVD version of his work to show at my club. He has asked me "What pixel dimensions do you normally use to save a video file? "
What is my answer? I notice Adobe Premiere quotes Frame size as 720h 576v (1,067) - Whatever that means !!!!
THANKS
Pixel dimensions
Re: Pixel dimensions
720x576 is the reselution of a frame. 720 pixels across and 576 pixels height.Michael Gough wrote:HELP !!!
As anyone who knows me will verify I am technically ignorant about my hobby. Which proves you can sometimes succeed on instinct. However occasionally it is essential to get correct information. An AV maker is willing to give me a video DVD version of his work to show at my club. He has asked me "What pixel dimensions do you normally use to save a video file? "
What is my answer? I notice Adobe Premiere quotes Frame size as 720h 576v (1,067) - Whatever that means !!!!
THANKS
maybe someone else can explain other things, I know them but I forget the figuares and numbers!!
Ian Gardner
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I am pretty sure you are right, Michael. Your AV maker wants to know the video image dimensions (720x576) in PAL if the material is in the usual 4x3 Academy ratio.
Many AV workers use 1440x1080 which gives a high-resolution image but unless you plan to use the DVD on hi-def systems that is no use to you.
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DIVERSION
That is because as Tom Hardcastle has pointed out more than once video pixels are oblong while normal computer ones are square.
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That was a diversion because all video gear is built to handle video pixels and will present the image in the correct 4:3 ratio on a screen.
It only becomes relevant when you take a screen grab from a video and want to print it or use it as a regular computer image. Normal (non-video) gear does not know about oblong pixels! So a screen grab from a video will appear on a normal computer screen or print as 3.75:3 ratio - everyone will seem a little taller and thinner. To get the proportion right you must use paint/image software which lets you stretch the image to 768 x 576. (Most - not yet all - the screen grabs on the website have been stretched this way.)
Dave
Many AV workers use 1440x1080 which gives a high-resolution image but unless you plan to use the DVD on hi-def systems that is no use to you.
================
DIVERSION
- Check the maths 1440x1080 is 4:3
while 720x576 is 3.75:3
That is because as Tom Hardcastle has pointed out more than once video pixels are oblong while normal computer ones are square.
================
That was a diversion because all video gear is built to handle video pixels and will present the image in the correct 4:3 ratio on a screen.
It only becomes relevant when you take a screen grab from a video and want to print it or use it as a regular computer image. Normal (non-video) gear does not know about oblong pixels! So a screen grab from a video will appear on a normal computer screen or print as 3.75:3 ratio - everyone will seem a little taller and thinner. To get the proportion right you must use paint/image software which lets you stretch the image to 768 x 576. (Most - not yet all - the screen grabs on the website have been stretched this way.)
Dave
For detailed tech info on DV and HDV try www.adamwilt.com the pixels in SD DV are non-square and this can be selected in Photoshop CS2/3.
ned c
ned c