|
Posted by Richard Crowley on 11/24/06 15:39
<pwilleke@gmail.com> wrote ...
> Well, I'm new to this kind of technology, so forgive me if I ask
> questions that seem rather stupid :-)
>
> I don't know the exact camera type, the footage was shot with the
> camera's of two colleagues.
> It was on the kick-off weekend of our company. I placed the original
> footage on my pc using FireWire (this was already 1,5 year ago).
>
> I created a new project in Premiere 6, I think the only thing I
> changed
> was choosing PAL. the rest I left on default values.
>
> When I created the AVI, 1,5 year later, I just did Create Movie,
> didn't
> change anything here either.
>
> But I do know the quality is a whole lot worse.
>
> Is there anything I can look-up in Premiere to give you more info? If
> yes, where do I find it?
1) Recommend using "Gspot" to analyze your source AVI file...
http://www.headbands.com/gspot/
2) Recommend switching the "field order" (odd-first or
even-first, etc.) to see if that may fix the "banding/strobing"
symptom. I don't remember how to do this in Premiere 6.
There may be other project settings in Premiere that could
be "tweaked" to better match the characteristics of your
source AVI file.
3) If it looks good on your computer, but not on DVD,
consider playing the video from a computer (like any
other computer-based image like PowerPoint presentation,
etc.) Be sure to optimize the playback machine. Put the
AVI file on the internal hard-drive, defrag, etc.
Navigation:
[Reply to this message]
|