Changing aspect ratio when exporting

I want to chamg the aspect ratio to 16:9. How do you do this in PRL 7?

What do you want to change?
- The original material as recorded by your camera?
- Or a 4:3 project you are already working on in PE?
When you start a new PE project, you should specify the format: 4:3 or 16:9 (widescreen).
You cannot change these project settings inbetween. As a workaround: save your video on the timeline as an .avi; start a new project with the required different settings and import this .avi in the new project.
You can input 4:3 footage in 16:9 projects and vice versa, but PE will then crop the image or add black lines to it.
Also you can share (export) a 4:3 project as a 16:9 movie and vice versa, but the same will happen.
Easiest to start with:
Open a new project and select 16:9 settings.
Import 16:9 clips from your camera or whatever source.
If you import 4:3 clips/pictures: enlarge en position these on the timeline so that the enlarged picture will fill the entire 16:9 screen.
Hope this helps a bit.
Felix

Similar Messages

  • Set maximum aspect ratio when exporting

    Hello,
    I'm using LR5 and I'm wondering if it's possible (maybe with plugins if necessary) to set a maximum aspect ratio when experting photos. For example I have a picture that I cropped to be a panorama, with an aspect ratio of 26:11. The print shop can print at a maximum aspect ratio of 19:11. So my 26:11 image is too small and I need to add some bars at the top and bottom of my photo to reach an aspect ratio of 19:11 (see also the sketch below). Later, when I get the finished prints, I have to cut the bars at the top and bottom with a pair of scissors for example. Is it possible to let LR automatically add these borders for a given maximum apsect ratio?

    Hi Victoria, thank you for your reply. I looked at the Mogrify plugin, but couldn't find the option I need. I see some options for canvas and resizing and adding bars, but these all require to set a certain absolute pixel dimension. I don't want to resize images to a specific pixel size, I just want to correct the aspect ratio by adding bars at the bottom and top of the photo. Maybe I'm missing something in the Mogrify plugin? Could you explain how I can add the borders automatically to reach a maximum aspect ratio of 19:11 using Mogrify? Just to be clear, all photos with an aspect ration between 11:11 and 19:11 don't have to be changed. Only photos with an aspect ratio larger than 19:11 should be changed to 19:11 by adding the bars.

  • FCP project not the correct aspect ratio when exporting to Quicktime

    Hello All;
    I am trying to export a FCP project in its native resolution (1440 X 1080) to Quicktime but everytime I try, the aspect ratio is messed up and people look taller and thinner than they should.
    The project is a resolution of 1440 X 1080 as determined by examining the sequence settings in FCP.
    I configure quicktime (see below) to a resolution of 1440 X 1080.
    So why isn't my Quicktime video the correct resolution when I play it with the IMac's Quicktime player ? I shrink the player to 1/2 size to fit it all on the screen.
    My exact settings are below ...
    Export - Using Quicktime Conversion
    Format - Quicktime Movie
    Video Settings - Compressor - MPEG-4
    Quality - Best
    Not sure if I changed the framerate - if I did, I probably changed it to 29.97
    I didn't touch the other settings in the video settings - left them to default
    I didn't change the filter settings - I left them at default
    Size - 1440 X 1080 (The actual resolution of my source video)
    I checked the box - preserve aspect ratio using letterbox (If applicable)
    Other settings were left at default
    Sound Settings - Format - AAC
    Rate - 48 KHZ
    Render Settings - Quality - Best
    Target Bitrate - 128 KHZ (This was left at default - I did not change it)
    Prepare for Internet Streaming - Fast Start checked (This was default - I did not change it)
    All other settings not specifically mentioned were left at default.
    Thanks. Tim

    I don't have much of an answer for you, but to test try not checking the preserve aspect ratio. Rather than reexport the entire 1 hour just export 10 seconds so that you can trouble shoot different things.
    Hope that helps a bit,
    Eric

  • Unwanted moderate distortion of aspect ratio when exporting video

    This seems to be a new problem for me, and I don't THINK I've changed any of my parameters. But the result is now wrong... Help!
    I use my VCR to record from US broadcasts (good old fashioned plain old TV, NTSC, I presume). Then I transfer snippets onto my DV camcorder (good ol' plain DV, nothing with 16:9 or anything like that). Then I import my DV footage into iMovie HD 6.0.2. It imports fine and looks like a normal aspect ratio.
    But when I export using the File > Export... setting, I get a Quicktime video which appears vertically squished. The faces are too wide, bodies are too fat.
    Looking at the various aspect ratios, I see that the preview window in iMovie HD is about 720 by 525 -- there are no black bars or letterboxing, and faces and bodies look normal. But the output video is 720 by 480, which is (according to a quick Google search) a normal NTSC output. No cropping has taken place, and no letterboxing, either. So that's why it's squished. But...
    So why is iMovie showing me something from right off my TV screen which is the wrong aspect ratio but seems to have the correct proportions? That would seem to imply that my good ol' TV and VCR are not actually operating in NTSC proportions... which would be extremely weird because the footage I happen to have recorded is from an old game show from the 1960s. Do I have some setting wrong somewhere?? Is there something fundamental I don't understand? Help! Like I said, this is a new problem with me and I don't recall having changed any import settings.

    Thanks for your help! I had no idea that so many video processes use rectangular pixels. But I'm still confused. What I see on screen in iMovie (and most QuickTime stuff) looks fine, but what I got out of this last set of conversions looks wrong.
    Obviously you used the Full Quality DV option which uses rectangular pixels, right?
    Uh... I have no idea. I've spent a couple of minutes looking through the menus in iMovie and I don't see anything labeled "Full Quality DV". I'm not specifically trying to export in DV format; I'm trying to compress my NTSC format so that it plays back in nearly full size on my iBook laptop, which cannot keep up with Sorensen video or the H.264 (or two-sixty-whatever) codecs. I found that Cinepak CAN be played back at this size on my iBook. But Cinepak is a compression standard, not a video frame size standard, right?
    What you are seeing is normal... 720x480 NTSC rectangular pixel DV should be scaled to 656x480 square pixels.
    No, it's not normal. It doesn't look normal to the eye. It's not what normally happened to me in the past. It drives me nuts. By those three definitions, it's not normal.
    I am not trying to export in a format that fits some video standard or TV set. I'm trying to export a QuickTime movie which will display properly when played back by QuickTime. So I'm extremely frustrated when iMovie (or something) takes a video clip from an NTSC source and for some odd reason squishes it.
    When you say that "720x480 NTSC rectangular pixel DV should be scaled to 656x480 square pixels", I assume you mean that it should be scaled to that number of square pixels in order to display on a computer monitor with square pixels (i.e., basically all computer monitors) in a way which makes faces and bodies appear of normal proportions, right? Are you implying that the problem is that rectangular pixels are NOT being converted/resampled to square pixels, but that the conversion is being done on a (no-resampling) pixel-by-pixel basis? I'm just not sure I understnand the point you are making here.
    Since I had different results in the past, there must be SOMETHING different about my current setup. After reading the link you suggested, I see that there are a HUGE number of possible complications out there. The main idea, however, is that I want to produce a QuickTime movie which looks the same as the preview shown in iMovie: Same shape of faces, same shape of bodies, just as it was when I originally viewed the footage on my television.
    Thanks!

  • Aspect ratio when exporting full quality -- is this a bug?

    Hi,
    I'm new to iMovie. I'm really enjoying playing around with it and think it's a really nice tool and very intuitive. But there's one thing that is bothering me. I'm working with 16:9 aspect ratio (Widescreeen) as the project type which corresponds to how the movies were recorded (a Canon MVX4i or Optura 600 in the USA I think). Everything works fine until I try to export in full quality format (using Export). The .dv file only plays back in 4:3 aspect ratio. I tried using the Expert settings, with 16:9 set and both PAL and NTSC but QuickTime and Preview still only see the movie in 4:3 aspect. If I understand correctly, the aspect ratio is just a flag that is set somewhere.
    Is this a bug or am I missing something? I don't have QT Pro by the way?
    One more question: in expert settings for DV Export settings, does anyone have a recommendation for what I shold pick for DV Format, and Scan mode?
    Thanks very much in advance,
    David
    Powerbook G4   Mac OS X (10.4.4)  

    Hi David,
    This isn't entirely unique to DV. But in simplistic terms what happens is that the widescreen footage that you capture with your camera is the same resolution as square screen. The number of pixels (the dots that make up the picture) for PAL, which is the format used in Portugal I believe, is 720 x 576.
    The pixels are squashed into a kind of oblong shape but then when played on widescreen kit the pixels become square causing the picture to stretch sideways. When you view the footage in QT it simply shows the picture as is - meaning that it outputs the picture as 720x576 with the oblong display.
    However, when you view the footage in iMovie there's a flag in the file that tells iMovie that the footage is wide and therefore to stretch it accordingly.
    There's a differing opinion of whether this display difference in QT is a bug or a feature. As Dan says, if you want to display widescreen footage in QT you're better off exporting a widescreen QT movie using the expert settings:
    From within iMovie...
    - Select File --> Export from the menu
    - In the Quicktime section choose Compress Movie For "Expert Settings"
    - Click the Share button
    - In the save dialog box that pops up Select "Movie to QuickTime Movie" in the Export section
    - Click Option...
    - In the Movie Settings dialog box click on settings
    - Select DV - PAL from the compression type
    - Keep the Frame Rate at Current
    - In the Compressor settings choose your Quality
    - Set the scan mode to Interlaced
    - Set the Aspect Ratio to 16:9 ( this is the bit that tells QT to play in widescreen)
    - Click OK
    - In the sound section click the Setting button
    - In the sounds settings dialog box set the Format to Linear PCM
    - Set the channels to Stereo (L R)
    - Set the Rate to 48.000kHz
    - Set the Sample Rate Converter settings to Quality Normal and the Linear PCM Settings to a sample size of 16 bits.
    - Uncheck all the other options (Little Endian, Floating Point and Unsigned)
    - Click OK
    - Uncheck the Prepare for Internet Streaming box
    - Click OK and set a destination for your file.
    - Click save to compress the file.
    The resulting file that is created above should now show in QT as widescreen. However you should bear in mind that you should work off the raw DV file rather than this new created one in iMovie. As a rule of thumb you should be thinking a little bit about the output media of the file. So for example if your final output medium is DVD then you can continue to work in iMovie and iDVD without problem. If you want to create a QT file for viewing on your computer then it's advisable to create a seperate QT file for this pupose.
    If you'd like to know a little more about the way aspect ratios works here's some links for you:
    Wikipedia
    World easiest explanation of anamorphic 16:9
    Hope this makes a little more sense now and sorry if I've covered stuff you already know. Hopefully this information will be of use to you but post back if you need more help.
    Cheers.
    David.
    PowerMac G4 Dual 1.25Ghz / 1GB RAM   Mac OS X (10.4.5)   PowerBook 12" 1Ghz / 768MB RAM

  • Aspect ratio when exporting to DVD

    Newbie - forgive me but have been struggling with this one for days.
    Have a project - 5 min film - in FCP X and really struggling to export it to DVD using the share command - it will copy fine but the original is in 1920 x 1080 and the DVD share option automatically selects to burn at 720 x 576.  Inevitably the output is skewed and the altered ratio means that there is lost image around the edges.
    I need to have this project outputted onto DVD.
    I have tried exporting via the Blue Ray option and using the DVD disc option instead of the 'Hard Drive (Blu Ray)' option under Settings/Output Device but although this process seemed successful the DVD would not play on either a DVD player or Blu Ray Player.
    Is there any way of exporting direct to DVD in 1920 x 1080 or similar locked aspect ratio (eg 1280 x 720 etc) or of altering the default output setting for DVD sharing?
    I don't have compressor, I don't have DVD or Blu Ray burner software and surely FCP X can do this?
    I have altered the format of the original file into various aspect ratios but irrespective, the output ratio is always the same incorrect ratio of 720 x 576.
    In anticipation of your help, thank you and please keep your answers in plain language - am new to FCP X and macs!
    Thank you
    LizW

    Taht's really puzzzling. Could you export a short section of your video as a Master File and open in QuickTime – and post a screen shot of the Movie Inspector Report?
    Here are some screen shots of a 1080 PAL video. I have chosen a slide show with 3:2 images to emphasize the circle shape and the rectangle that extends to nearly the width of the frame.
    I then export as Share>DVD. Note the 720X576 frame size bottom left.
    Here, I have opened the VOB file after export in VLC (DVD PLayer will not support a screen shot).
    As you can see the circle shape is not distorted (so the anamorphic data was read correctly). Nor is anything cropped in display – since the entire rectangle is shown and the width of the black bars is unchanged.
    Russ

  • Wrong aspect ratio when export to mov file

    Hi,
    Hoping that you can help me. I've being filming some Hi-def widescreen 16:9 footage which i've want to export to a mov file. However, whatever option i chose, the resutant export gets converted to 4:3.
    I'm not sure what i'm doing wrong. Here are the details.
    Original File
    PAL HDV - 1080i 25fps
    Export
    Codec H.264
    Output 1440x1080 25fps Upper 100%
    Source 1440x1080 25fps Upper
    Aspect: D1/DV PAL widescreen 16:9
    Hope you can help. Let me knwo if you need any more information.
    Cheers
    Rob

    Thanks for your input. I think the main issue is that i originally captured the video using another peice of software. These files were 1440x1080 so i was getting 'letter boxing' on the left and right. After doing a lot of reading, i now understand the importance of selecting the correct project setting
    Leading on from this, I'm about to do some more filming and have hired a HDV camcorder (Sony HVR 27p - PAL). It's 1080i and can film in interlaced (25 or 50fps) or progressive. (25fps)
    My questions are:
    The required output playback file (mov file format) needs to be progressive. Should i film in progressive as well, or stick with interlaced and change the output settings when creating the output file?
    If i stick with interlaced, do i film in 50 or 25 as the output file needs to be 25fps?
    Although the camera captures 16:9, the pixels are 1440x1080 (which by all accounts in usual with HDV cameras.) Do i select a project setting whose setup is 1440x1080 or do i use 1720x1080?
    Thanks a lot for your help so far.
    Rob

  • Maintaining 16:9 aspect ratio when exporting

    I am still using FCP 5.0.4 and Compressor 2.0.1. My problem is that I can not work out how to export FCP projects in 16:9 aspect. All my raw files in FCP are either 16:9 .mov files from DVD's or footage from my Sony PDX10P in widescreen format. They are OK in FCP but when I go to export in either Compressor or direct to QuickTime Movie or QT Conversion I end up with files that are 4:3 aspect which distorts the footage. I obviously have some sort of incorrect setting, could anyone give me some pointers.

    That makes sense. Thanks Covita
    Changing the resolution using QT Pro is a quick and dirty solution then, which should if possible be avoided. I asked about this earlier (Nov. 2006), but got no response.
    Lesson learned!
    Good thing I use Compressor and DVD Studio Pro then. Because even though you choose a 16:9 preset in Compressor, it reads the footage as anamorphic and does everything right. I wondered if I had to use a 4:3 preset in Compressor to get this anamorphic issue right, but fortunately not
    This is what MPEG Streamclip says about my encoded anamorphic clip (.VOB file on the DVD): MPEG-2, 720 × 576, 16:9, 25 fps, 7.70 Mbps, lower field first.
    A little anamorphic checkbox inside iDVD would have made this easy with iDVD too.

  • AE changing aspect ratio of rendered frames

    I'm rendering .png frames at NTSC DV, 720x480, Pixel aspect 0.9.  My composition settings in AE are set to the same, however, when I import the frames they are listed as 720x480 (1.11).  When viewed in the composition window the frames extend past the viewable area on both sides.  Using AE 7.0.
    Why is this happening, and how do I fix it?
    Thanks in advance for any suggestions.

    This is going to sound weird but it's the truth. The aspect ratio doesn't change the pixels. Aspect ratio only sets the interpretation - or tells a video app how to  make those pixels fit in a desired space on a scan line. It's a lot like the PPI tag added to images intended for print. The tag has nothing to do with the actual pixels.
    That said, if you can't find a setting for choosing pixel aspect ratio when you setup the output module and the render settings, then the PAR tag won't be added to the render. AE, or your NLE will then take a look at the frame size and make a guess as to PAR and field order. The guess may be wrong. If it is, all you have to do is go into the interpretation settings and change them.
    I'd guess you're rendering to a DV codec. If so, there's no PAR tag so all you have to do is reset the interpretation. The same goes for Premiere or FCP or Vegas or any other NLE. Sometimes DV footage gets interpreted as the wrong PAR.
    Hope this helps.

  • In Lightroom 4, is it possible to change the resolution when exporting to Facebook?

    Is it possible to change the resolution when exporting a photo to Facebook using either the regular plugin or Jeffrey Friedl's plugin?  I can't seem to do it; I only have control over the image dimensions, not the resolution and the dimensions, as you can see in the screen shots below:
    I have control over both when I export to my hard drive (or a flash drive, etc.), as you can see below:
    I can't find the option to control the resolution when I try to export to Facebook.  Before I got Lightroom 4, I would create whole new low-resolution files of images I wanted to post online using Photoshop.  The image size settings I would use are a longest edge of 10 inches at 72ppi, and I would like to continue doing this.  If I can only set the longest side to 720 pixels (I can't even seem to set the longest edge to an inches value - I can only choose a pixels value) and not change the resolution from 300ppi to 72ppi, then my photos' longest edge will only be less than 3 inches long (right?).  Thus, I really want to be able to upload low-resolution photos to Facebook via Lightroom with the ability to change both the resolution and the image dimensions.  Any idea how to do it without having to export to my hard drive first?  Thanks!

    Rob Cole wrote:
    I'd be inclined to set it to zero so it obviously doesn't mean anything
    You can set it to whatever you like, and it makes no difference. Most of the time (depending on how you saved it), it will still open as "72".
    When you save an image for web, the resolution is usually stripped from the file. It's simply not there anymore. That's probably what happens in the Lr facebook module, and that's why there's no entry for it.
    But when you open that image somewhere else, that default of 72 ppi is assigned. Most apps need to know what to do with a file if asked to print it out. So there is a default, and that's usually 72, mostly by convention. With that default ppi, it prints out at a comparable size to what you see on screen at 1:1 display.
    And when people see that, they think "hey, web images are 72 ppi". But they're not - that figure is just inserted there by the opening application.

  • How to keep original aspect ratio when cropping in Camera Raw?

    How to keep original aspect ratio when cropping in Camera Raw? Cant figure it out! With shift, the aspect ratio is 1:1. But I didnt set it to 1:1 (I checked "normal").

    The Shift key works once you’ve set your crop ratio.  DSLRs would typically do 2:3 and others sometimes do 3:4.

  • Changing Aspect Ratio in FCPX 10.0.08

    Hi - I think I must be losing my marbles because i cant, for the life of me, find out how to change Aspect Ratio during edit.
    My rushes are previewable as full screen but once i pull them into the timeline they get letterboxed automatically.
    I search online and came across advice to go to Sequence > Settings > Change Aspect Ratio, but i cant seem to locate it.
    Can anyone help?

    I dont seem to have that icon?

  • How to change aspect ratio on shockwave

    Hi guys,
    I need your help. I cannot find the answers by how to change the aspect ratio on shockwave. Please can someone help me how I can change aspect ratio on shockwave??
    Thanks

    Just like this one:
    [IMG]http://www.photo-dvd-maker.com/img/howto/original_4_3_to_16_9_fit.jpg[/IMG]
    [IMG]http://www.photo-dvd-maker.com/img/howto/original_16_9_to_4_3_fit.jpg[/IMG]
    [IMG]http://www.photo-dvd-maker.com/img/howto/original_16_9_to_4_3_fill.jpg[/IMG]
    Is it possible to change the aspect ratio on the propert?? if so, which property that I should use to change the video frame??
    Thanks

  • Nested sequences change aspect ratio of clips underneath them

    Premiere Pro 6.0.5
    Mac Book Pro Retina
    See attached screen shots:
    1. Nested sequence is off - everything under is is crisp and proper aspect ratio
    2. Nested sequence is on - everything under it is blurry and wrong aspect ratio
    3. Only nested sequence is on - so you can see it does NOT contain the layers underneath it by mistake
    Why is this happening?  It's really troubling... It generally happens when I go to render my sequence - it goes all haywire wrong aspect ratio when rendered with that transparent nested sequence above everything.
    Image 1:
    Nested sequence is off - everything under is is crisp and proper aspect ratio
    Image 2:
    Nested sequence is on - everything under it is blurry and wrong aspect ratio (it gets pushed up - see black line that is formed on the bottom)
    Image 3:
    Only nested sequence is on - so you can see it does NOT contain the layers underneath it by mistake

    Crap... I noticed that this glitch now spread to even clips that have NOTHING above them.  The scaling is wrong, and image quality gets a bit blurry after rendering.  It always squishes my clips up after rendering, but they look absolutely perfect pre-render.
    New example:
    1. Clip 01 - Opacity slightly turned down to destroy the rendered preview - looks perfect:
    2. Clip 01 - Opacity all the way up, clip rendered wrong - bottom squishes up.  Whyyyyy:

  • Can I maintain original aspect Ratio when making web Quicktime video

    Hello there,
    I have to convert at 16:9 Premiere file I originally made for DVD into a web ready format. Can I do this without distorting the image? In other words, I want to reduce the file size and keep the proportion intact.
    Also, for future reference, what is the optimum aspect ratio when creating video content for web with Premiere?
    Thank you in advance for your help.
    M

    Thank you Jim. Sorry for not replying sooner; I've been offline for a couple of days. Your reply is helpful and I'm
    happy I won't have to squash my original 16:9 format movie to put it online.
    Martha

Maybe you are looking for