Photo quality--why so bad?

I'm so disappointed with the quality of my photos--never had this problem before! I've got a 28mg image that looks awful--blurry, loss of color quality, etc.
What happened? No tips on apple help.

but the translation is more a no-brainer...
Unfortunately, it's not easy for a third-generation Danish-American, born in Denmark, Wisconsin!
Talespinner, iMovie isn't helped at all by using high-resolution images. In fact, it tends to make the jaggies problem worse. Using large images offer us increased flexibility for cropping the image, but it doesn't improve quality. In fact, it worsens it from everything I've seen.
I suggest you try reducing the size of the images. If they reside in iPhoto, use iPhoto to export the images to files 720x540. Import THOSE to iMovie. (Or after cropping an image in iPhoto, export the cropped image to 720x540.)
It's crucial to avoid the iMovie bug that adds lots of jaggies when you Share the project to iDVD. If there are UNrendered images — images imported with the Ken Burns checkbox OFF or other unrendered clips — iMovie will ask permission to render those clips. Do NOT grant permission or iMovie will add lots of jaggies. Let iDVD render them.
If that bug has already damaged some images, re-import those images. The damaged clips cannot be fixed.
Please let us know whether resizing helps.
Karl

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  • Why did my photo quality go bad since ios 7.0.1?

    why did my photo quality go bad since ios 7.0.1?

    don't know, I have no issue with pictures taken from my built in camera app.
    what troubleshooting steps have you taken?

  • The SOLUTION to bad iDVD Photo Quality

    I have been a fairly silent member of this forum for a long time now, and have seen many supposed "solutions" with the known issue of how iDVD compresses, and ultimately destroys, image quality in DVDs. Granted, much of this compression is normal, considering a full-quality photo from iPhoto looks quite different after being smashed into the standard NTSC 720x480 format of a DVD and compressed to a variation of MPEG-2. That being said, this workaround has been well-tested, and will give you a very high quality slideshow that you can play on your TV. (take note that low quality TV will come into play in making the final product look bad, not the slideshow itself!)
    NOTE: I only tested this in iPhoto 6/iDVD 6 on a 10.4.8 PowerMac G5. I would love to get confirmation it works on Intel Macs and other machines.
    1. Select an album or group of pictures in iPhoto
    2. Go to File > Export and click the Quicktime tab
    3. You will have several options...
    - Width/Height: Defaults to 640x480 (4x6 image). This will result in about 100kb per image file, which gives you over 90 pictures for a 10 MB slideshow that you can e-mail to your friends.
    - Display image for: Obviously controls how long each image is displayed in the slideshow.
    - Background: Can be an image or a color. This is what you will see as a border if the slideshow image is smaller than the window.
    - Music: This is actually kinda complicated. What is the "currently selected music?" When you select an album and press the "Play" button to do a quick slideshow, there is a tab for Music. Whatever is selected here will be added to the slideshow when you export it.
    4. Click 'Export', choose the filename and location, and then save it.
    The resulting Quicktime file will be quite small, while still retaining the quality of your images. It uses a default crossdissolve transition that can't be changed. It keeps this quality when you drag the Quicktime file into iDVD and burn a disk/save a disk image.
    Downsides...
    - no ken burns
    - can't use different transitions
    - no other advanced slideshow options
    But it gets the job done! If you're wondering why this works while other methods don't, it's all in the .Mov container that's created. If you open the file in Quicktime and got to Window > Show Movie Info, you will see that it lists each JPEG within the package, along with a transition component. It doesn't compress the images into a video file, but rather references the original images within the .Mov package! Cool huh?
    Let me know if this works for you guys. I've offered this advice to many people with good results, which is why I'm posting it here.
    smi1ey =)

    Smiley,
    What you suggest isn't really a SOLUTION to bad iDVD photo quality, because you aren't creating a DVD that can be played back with a DVD player.
    You are simply suggesting an alternate approach for distributing slideshows which requires the receiver have a computer. iPhoto/iMovie give you several options on prepairing slideshows/movie for various methods of distribution (CD, email, etc).
    Some DVD players will also play jpg files from a CD or DVD and that avoids the mpg-2 compression quality loss, but a TV set image is still a TV set image.
    which gives you over 90 pictures for a 10 MB slideshow
    A lot of email programs aren't happy with a file that size, and of course, since you have created a QuickTime movie, your PC friends will also need to install QuickTime. The Flip4Mac Studio application will let you convert your QuickTime movie to a WMV movie for those with PCs.
    I'm glad you found an approach that you are happy with.
    If you open the file in Quicktime and got to Window > Show Movie Info, you will see that it lists each JPEG within the package, along with a transition component. It doesn't compress the images into a video file, but rather references the original images within the .Mov package
    BTW, there are several different CODECs that can be used in the .MOV file container - Photo JPEG is just one.
    QuickTime Pro offers more saving options than the standard version, so I recommend you invest in QuickTime Pro. You will be able to create your slideshow directly in QuickTime Pro.
    F Shippey

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    I have Imovie HD 6 and Final Cut Express. I am creating the typical slideshow with photos from a digital camera and adding transitions and music, blah, blah.
    When I export in each application I get the same quicktime export screen. No matter what I do I get crappy photo quality in the imovie export and amazing photo quality in the FCE export. Are they not both using the same quicktime export? Why is there such a difference in quality?
    I did notice that if I render the imovie video as "uncompressed" ir in HD I get ALMOST the same quality as the FCE render on a typical MP4 export.
    Just wondering why this is since they seem to both just be using Quicktime to create the compression.

    I don't own FPE (or have any "video" camera) but you're mixing apples and oranges when using image formats in "video" apps.
    iMovie is a DV editing app and converts your single image into 30 similar files per second (.dv). The same is probably true with FCE but it may be set for "high quality" which may appear better. And the newer option to use MPEG-4 does make a bit of difference.
    Neither is appropriate for using still image files because of this conversion.
    First rule would be to use the appropriate dimensions for your destination. Standard definition video would be 640X480 and not your multi megabyte source files.
    I would add (scaled) the 640X480 sized image to a few seconds of audio (you decide the duration), extract the new video track and then export that as DV Stream (.dv) using QuickTime Pro.
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  • Crunmmy photo quality in Safari

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    Hi Tools,
    Try turning off the accelerator, I'll bet that is the culprit.
    The accelerators usually downsample the picture quality to reduce the filesize of the images at the expense of quality, but improving speed.
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    I work extremely hard on the quality of my images and when I use iDVD they don't look to bad, but when I insert images in between video clips in iMovie the quality of the images is degraded something terrible and my professional images look like they were taken on a cheap camera phone. Exporting the videos at the highest quality helps a little, but it seems to be the import quality which is reducing them down - least that is what it appears to me.
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    Hi,
    Defcom has listed the main fix.
    You could also try the Bandwidth setting in iChat > Preferences > Video section > Bandwidth Limit drop down.
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    Using Little Snitch does show that Bonjour Video chats do use the Internet
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  • Photo quality follow-up questions

    I read OT's response to a photo quality question and had some follow-ups I'd like to ask. Aside from cropping photos to 4:3 format does increasing the dpi of the photos have any effect in improving the quality of the final image in iDVD?
    I'm making a dvd of family photos for my wife. Some were taken with a digital camera, some are photos scanned by myself and some are photos given to us by relatives that they scanned. I'm putting them together in iMovie, leaving them static - no pans or zooms, keeping the image size at a value of "1", setting the duration at 5 seconds and grouping them by subject using chapter markers so I can get around the 99 photos limitation. (I have over 1500 photos.)
    I've already burned on dvd and was disappointed by the "jaggies" on most of the photos when viewed on my cinema display. Haven't looked at the dvd on a regular tv (CRT, not flat screen/digital). The images looked great in iMovie. It occurred to me that increasing the dpi - most were at 72 dpi - to 300 might improve this issue all other things remaining the same. I can do that easily in Photoshop, but was wondering if that would be a waster of time - especially if no improvement would be realized.
    Thanks for any thoughts/help that anyone can offer.

    iMovie HD 6.0.3 and iDVD 6.0.4
    As far as I know - this will give max quality possibly when making a Video-DVD
    resolution: 72dpi or 300dpi
    depends on size
    A small picture 200 x 300 pixels - will be worse than a 1200 x 1600 picture.
    Resolution doesn't matter as I see it.
    iMovie and/or iDVD will try to scale it to fit - and up or down-scaling
    will not be done kindly.
    Still using my 2016 × 1512 - usually give good result in iMovie
    but if I Share to iDVD (iMovie HD6 6.0.3 or 4) - BAD RESULT
    I just close the iMovie project
    Drop the iMovie project icon (With a black star on it) into the iDVD application (menu window).
    Result best possibly for a Video-DVD - DVD standard is the limit.
    Else that determine the final quality on the DVD
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    1. iDVD 08, 09 & 11 has three levels of qualities. (version 7.0.1, 7,0.4 & 7.1.1) and iDVD 6 has the two last ones
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    (movies + menus up to 120 min.) - BEST (but not always for short movies e.g. up to 45 minutes in total)
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    (movies + menus less than 60 min.) - High quality on final DVD (Can be best for short movies)
    • High Quality (in iDVD08 or 09) / Best Quality (in iDVD6)
    (movies + menus up to 120 min.) - slightly lower quality than above
    Menu can take 15 minutes or even more - I use a very simple one with no audio or animation like ”Brushed Metal” in old Themes.
    About double on DL DVDs.
    2. Video from
    • FCE/P - Export out as full quality QuickTime.mov (not self-containing, no conversion)
    • iMovie x-6 - Don't use ”Share/Export to iDVD” = destructive even to movie project and especially so
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    • iMovie’08 or 09 or 11 are not meant to go to iDVD. Go via Media Browser or rather use iMovie HD 6 from start.
    3. I use Roxio Toast™ to make an as slow burn as possibly e.g. x4 or x1 (in iDVD’08 or 09  this can also be set)
    This can also be done with Apple’s Disk Utilities application when burning from a DiskImage.
    4. There has to be about or more than 25Gb free space on internal (start-up) hard disk. iDVD can't
    use an external one as scratch disk (if it is not start-up disc). For SD-Video - if HD-material is used I guess that 4 to 5 times more would do.
    5. I use Verbatim ( also recommended by many - Taiyo Yuden DVDs - I can’t get hold of it to test )
    6. I use DVD-R (no +R or +/-RW) - DVD-R play’s on more and older DVD-Players
    7. Keep NTSC to NTSC - or - PAL to PAL when going from iMovie to iDVD
    (I use JES_Deinterlacer to keep frame per sec. same from editing to the Video-DVD result.)
    8. Don’t burn more than three DVDs at a time - but let the laser cool off for a while before next batch.
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    HD-DVD was a short-lived standard and it was only a few Toshiba DVD-players that could playback.
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    (EU) PAL DVDs most often needs to be converted to play in US
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    • Lay-out - Turn on TV-Safe area and keep everything buttons, titles etc WELL INSIDE not even touching it !
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    • Don’t let HD spin down or be turned off (in Energy-Save)
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