DVD Burning Poor quality

I created a slide show in IPhoto including the "Ken Burns" effect. I also added four audio tracks to the slide show. I transferred the file to I DVD with sharing. Two audio tracks were dropped in the transfer and the resulting image quality was poor. Images were wavy and some had skips and tiling. Also the audio tracks that remained sounded like the artist was gargling the words. I'm a recent Apple convert and my I book is only 2 mo. old. Do I have a malfunctioning DVD burner or am I doing something wrong?

I created a slide show in IPhoto including the "Ken Burns" effect. I also added four audio tracks to the slide show. I transferred the file to I DVD with sharing. Two audio tracks were dropped in the transfer and the resulting image quality was poor. Images were wavy and some had skips and tiling. Also the audio tracks that remained sounded like the artist was gargling the words. I'm a recent Apple convert and my I book is only 2 mo. old. Do I have a malfunctioning DVD burner or am I doing something wrong?

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    Similar posts about this issue:
    https://discussions.apple.com/message/5207261#5207261
    When I import images into final cut express and  apply keyfram effects with panning and zooming a.ka. the 'Ken Burns Effect' I find that image quality is very poor. This occurs in most BUT NOT ALL images in viewer and canvas windows as well as rendered footage.  The video issues are severe interlacing artifacts (horizontal blurry lines) as well as motion jitter along edges.
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    -Using different software to render ken burns panning.
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    Ken burns effect looked great when the image was in a transition, but bad when it was not.  For example: Imagine a 5 second cross dissolve between regular video and ken burns motion image.  When image becomes clearly visible in the latter 2.5 seconds of the transition it looks excellent while panning/zooming. When the transition finishes there is a sudden change to poor quality in the pan/zoom.
    -The render bar on top of the timeline is dark-green for good-looking images, which according to the final cut manual, means 'no render necessary'
    -There was nothing special about these render-not-necessary images that I could find in resolution, settings, etc.
    -Good looking images were jpegs, gifs, and tiffs
    I tried converting other images and reimporting, no luck
    -I can make the ken burns look good for all images by playing the movie in the canvas window and setting it 99% zoom.
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    -This seems like a bug to me.
    Eventually I just used a screen recording application called screenflow to capture my video playing in canvas window at 99% in real time.
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    I don't mind converting file formats beforehand as long as they work well

    The render bar on top of the timeline is dark-green for good-looking images, which according to the final cut manual, means 'no render necessary'
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    100% zoom level is as close to how your video actually looks that a computer monitor can display.
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  • Premiere Elements 11: DVD Burn horrible quality.

    Hello!
    I am having issues with getting a decent playback on a video I cut together for a friend.
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    DaVeachi
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  • Why are burned DVD's poor quality from the IDVD?

    I made a slideshow in iphoto and exported to IDVD so I could burn copies.  The show lloked great on screen but the first copies on dvd's were terrible.  The quality of images are very poor and seem to be depixilated?  Why would the copies be so poor?  Does the widescreen or standard have something to do with it??
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  • Poor quality video when burning a DVD

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    It had so much vibration on some of the video clips.
    Video on a DVD is mpg-2 compressed (which looks at frame to frame differences in compression) and is interlaced.
    If you have content with lots of movement - like many hand-held shots - mpg-2 compression and interlacing will act to create lots of 'jumping' or 'vibration'. The only solution is to use a tripod and avoid shaky, hand-held shots.
    BTW, for a short clip, 'Best Performance' will give you the best quality you can get.
    F Shippey

  • I have created a slideshow in iPhoto and then used iDVD to burn the sideshow to a DVD. The quality of the DVD is poor. Any ideas?

    I have created a slideshow in  iPhoto and then burnt it to DVD using iDVD. The quality of the slideshow on the DVD is poor. Any ideas?

    Poor in what way?  iDVD creates standard definition displays of 640 x 480 pixels and will not look as sharp as the orignal photos in the iPhoto slideshow on a Mac monitor. 
    OT

  • Poor quality burns

    My burnt discs are of poor quality. Some images are fractured around the edges. Others are simply not sharp. I have tried using both +R and -R discs but the problem remains. Very disappointing as I have been working through Final Cut Express HD for the first time. Any ideas?

    Hi
    Just to add to Kasas good answers.
    1. iDVD 6 has two levels of qualities.
    • Best Quality (movies up to 120 min) - slightly lower quality than - se below
    • Best Performances (movies less than 60 min) - Highest quality on final DVD
    2. From FCE/P - Export out as full quality QuickTime.mov
    iMovie - Don't use Share/Export to iDVD = destructive even to movie project and especially so
    when the movie includes photos.
    Instead just drop the iMovie movie project icon (with a Star on it) into iDVD theme window.
    3. I use Toast™ to make an as slow burn as posibly eg x1
    4. There has to be about or more than 25Gb free space on internal (start-up) hard disc. iDVD can't
    use an external one as scratch disk (if it is not start-up disc).
    Yours Bengt W

  • I must be doing something stupid: Very poor quality DVD rendering!

    I am new to Apple products and after trolling this forum, I was able to create a DVD using iDVD on my Mac mini Core Duo - 2Ghz model. But, the video is of very poor quality (compression artifacts). I am lookging for guidance to creating a better video quality. But first, let me give you some background...
    I have created enough DVDs for my home videos captured both from my S-VHS camcorder and min-DV camcorders (both PAL and NTSC) using Pinnacle Studio (buggiest software in the world) and Adobe Premiere Elements under Windows. I have clear expectation of video quality and understand the quality differences between various standards.
    I have a fairly new toy - Canon Powershot TX1 digital camera which is an amazing compact camera that shoots 720p video @ 30fps and stores them in MJPEG format. Very good optics (10x optical image stabilized zoom). The only con is that it has very poor low light shooting ability.
    The steps I took to create this DVD...
    1. Import the .avi and .jpeg files from my camera into iPhoto library.
    2. Use iMovie (all part of iLife'08) to stitch the avi clips and also some of jpegs. Added transitions, titles and music in iMovie.
    3. Also, added some of my old low resolution avi files (from my older Canon camera - probably in 640x480 resolution).
    3. Exported it in the largest file mode (960x540) which created a 1.8GB file.
    4. Opened this movie file in Garageband and added the Chapter markers.
    5. Shared it with iDVD which automatically launched iDVD and showed the chapters in very nice scene selections menus.
    6. Invoked the Burn menu to burn the movie into a DVD using iDVD.
    Am I using the right methodology (I want the chapters)? I also observed that an earlier project which was pure 15 minutes of 720p content created a 4.7GB size exported file from iMovie whereas this current project has 51min of avi (of which about 10min is low res and the rest is in 720p format) and 12min of still photos produced a 1.8GB file when exported. This clearly tells me that the exported file is of poor quality. Why did that happen? Was it because I mixed the content and included low res videos?
    I should probably try creating a DVD from the pure 720p content and see how that looks.
    Any pointers would be a great help. BTW, the mac mini, iPhoto and iMovie forums are just awesome. The quality of posts and responses is very high.

    Thanks a lot, F Shippey.
    I exported it as a .dv file and then I was able to produce the DVD correctly with the Revolution theme and 11 chapters. I haven't done any editing any clips yet in iMovie. In most cases, I will not need to do that in most cases as the Canon TX1 creates individual avi clips every time I record and stop a recording. Having used a camcorder for over a decade now, I know how silly most of the recordings are.
    I will be rendering most of my videos as h.264 so that I can use the mac mini as a media server instead of using DVDs. I have to rip my own DVDs as h.264 soon (back to handbrake).
    PS: While creating my first DVD in OS X + iLife'08 tools, I noticed the following bugs:
    1. The clips disappear from the display in the editing window when the project becomes large and I had to zoom in and out to make them reappear. I verified that I wasn't viewing past the end of the last clip. If I hover the mouse in the blank window, it will show the clip in the preview window on the right.
    2. I had 11 chapters marked in Garageband and then I shared it with iDVD, it created two pages of scene selections with 6 chapters in each page. In the 2nd page, it added a random window (unconnected) for the 12th chapter that I didn't have. I didn't check for that and so my finished DVD has this weird 12th chapter with a copied moving clip in the window, but when selected, it doesn't do anything.
    These two bugs are way few compared to what Pinnacle Studio threw at me.
    Message was edited by: new2appletv

  • Poor Quality DVD with AVCHD input

    Hi all:
    I did not find this addressed on the iDVD pages or this page. I have imported AVCHD format video of my son's soccer game. Used iMovie08 7.1.1 to edit it. I was shooting in sports mode. It looks great connected directly to the TV.
    After rendering the movie (takes forever!) and burning a DVD, the quality output on my 50 inch tv is horrible. I tried using Xbox, the older PS2 and an built in older DVD player. The quality was poor especially when tracking the ball and the players (panning) across the field. I shot in wide format and burned in that format. Am I missing something?
    Is there something I can do? I spent all this money on the Canon HF10 and would really like to see it and share it! Also, is there a faster way to import besides the USB port? I know...a computer upgrade is also in my future.
    Thanks in advance.

    Steve Mullen wrote:
    What you are describing is nothing more than using iMovie 08 with iDVD in a fully logical--yet wrong--way. To see you do not need to have poor quality from FullHD, go to http://www.vimeo.com/user364340/videos
    HEY, AM I READING THIS RIGHT, (yeah I'm shouting)
    Your telling us you know how to use im08 and iDVD in some way that (apparently) no-one else knows but you won't share it, at the same time as advertising your book in your signature. I think you should be reading the terms and conditions of the forum here.
    Oh and by the way, while the video in the linked clips is indeed crisp and clear it stutters like a nervous old man with Parkinsons, not sure if the clips are yours but have to wonder if your books merely tell us how to make less than acceptable video.
    Tom Wolsky writes some really excellent books but is quite happy to share his knowledge for free and has helped 10's of thousands of people in the video forums. Indeed Jon and Karsten from this very forum have shared their considerable knowledge in the form of online written and video help.
    Get a grip Man.

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