Exporting best quality for HDV

Hi - I've been editing for the first time on HDV 1080i50 in FCP - I want to export as a Quicktime in the best setting possible but not sure what it is. When I go export quicktime hdv1080i it only lets me do medium quality - in the past when I've exported in dv-pal I can change the setting to best quality...can anyone suggest what I should do.
thanks

thanks - what about the settings on that please as I think it just does the last export setting (which would be dv-pal)
cheers

Similar Messages

  • Exporting best quality for DVD

    I shot video with a Canon 5d Mk2. 1080p 30 frames, 48k.  Looks awesome in Premiere!  But when I export the video to Encore i use the Mpeg-2 DVD preset, and it just kills the quality.  I have to burn to standard DVDs because my clients need them that way, so Blu ray isn't an option.
    I understand it has to compress everything, but i would like to know how to get the best quality possible.  It needs to look better! I am using CS5
    Please Help!

    John,
    Thanks for your response. The issue seems so simple since I've followed steps described on Lynda.com back when I was using CS4.
    I'm now using CS6.01. I created this video in CS4 and updated it in CS5. PS, AE, and Pr
    I've installed all of the updates to CS6. To newest  QuickTime and to the Video Card
    My PC is running Windows 7 Ent.; 64-bit Xeon CPU Quad 2.8GHz
    And I'm not running other software.
    The source footage is a sequenced .tiff animation I rendered out of AE.
    I've made a video a few years back. A copy is here on YouTube: http://youtu.be/lAh70G_AOFE.
    I'm not editing the video. I just get requests to have a DVD of the original source to play in our tradeshows. Sharp copy/product edges. It looks great in Premiere and I've set on paper my standard work from Lynda.com (Premiere Pro CS4 Essential Training - Chapter 16).
    I select the Sequence in Premiere Pro and select File / Adobe Dynamic Link / Send to Encore. Then set the Project and Build settings.
    But as you can see below the file exported to Encore didn't transcode (?) properly
    BEFORE Screen in Premiere:
    NEW: I can see now that the Video in the timeline has the jags

  • How to export best quality gif animations in flash

    how to export best quality gif animations in flash

    GIF is a color restricted format with on/off support for transparency. There's really no settings you can tweak to output a better GIF. You have a drop-down during GIF sequence export to allow transparency, select the amount of colors (up to 256) and you can choose dither to save a little filespace. The only 2 things in there that really matter are dither and amount of colors used to export.
    If your content is very similar (e.g. not a lot of complex gradients/shadows/etc) and is limited in color use turning down the amount of colors used and dithering is your only option.
    Make sure you're exporting the GIF via "Publish Settings" so you get a single animated GIF and not file->export->movie because this creates a separate sequence of GIF images for each frame.

  • Best quality for youtube

    I made a video and its 2.01 GB in iMovie. i want to put it on youtube but I want the best possible quality. The limit for youtube is 100MB whats the best way to compress my movie?

    Hi F,
    I followed your link and found your instructions about exporting from iMovie with best quality for YouTube.
    The instructions were pretty clear, although my options didn't line up with them exactly (I'll tell you my explicit settings below). Still, I exported it successfully.
    Then I uploaded the resultant .mov file to YouTube. When it was all finished processing, I viewed it. After the first fraction of a second all I saw was garbage -- just junk patterns filling the screen. The sound was excellent. (by the way, I had lots of very short clips in there -- 00:00:03 in length (not sure what the units are).
    So I went back to iMovie, opened up my movie project. Played the video. Now it is intermittent garbage, too. Looks just like the uploaded file, but only intermittently.
    Here are the exact options and settings I used for export:
    File->Share, chose quicktime and expert settings, pressed the "share" button.
    in the Export dialog, I selected "movie to quicktime movie" and clicked on the "options" button.
    Options:
    Video:
    Settings...
    Set compression to mpeg-4
    Set quality to medium
    Set frame rate to 30
    Let Key frame and Data rate defaulted (unchecked)
    Filter...
    didn't look at this. Now that I do, it's set to "none"
    Size...
    Selected the "custom size" radio button and set it to 320 x 240
    Sound:
    Settings...
    format: uncompressed
    sample rate: 44.1khz
    sample size: 16
    channels: 1 (mono)
    There was also a check box for "Prepare for internet Streaming"
    It was already checked and set to "fast start"
    I didn't change it.
    If you could give me any further help, I'd really appreciate it. This was my first attempt to put anything on YouTube.
    Thanks a lot,
    Bruce Delaplain
    Message was edited by: Bruce Delaplain1

  • Best quality for export?

    What settings for best quality when exporting an HDV video to disk?
    Using QT w/H264 but the quality is not acceptable. Can I tweak the settings?
    FWIW, I get better quality using Sony Click to Disc at its default settings. Just trying to match that at this point.
    Thanks.

    Which "disc" are you exporting to? Hard drive, CDR, DVD-R, etc. And is the point to get as file a file size as possible or are you just trying to archive video but don't care about file size?
    And to answer your question, yes you can tweak output settings for H264. When you go to Share -> "Export using QT..." on the export pull down you pick MPEG-4 then directly to the right is a button for "Options". Pick that. Also in there is a button for "Video Options" to refine it even further.
    Patrick

  • Import/Export to retain best quality for a Beginner

    Hi,
    I'm hoping someone could help me retain the best quality possible for my video while working on projects because whatever I'm doing now is not working.
    I shoot with a Sony HDR-FX1000 in HDV 1080i/24p and the picture and quality is amazing when plugged into a TV or played back on the camera LCD screen.  I use a new iMac 2.7GHz Intel Core i5, Mac OS X 10.7.4 to edit.  However, when I import into my new FCP X it is not as crisp and quality, and then when I export, it is definitely not the quality I imagined.  The video loses it's sharpness and it gets very noisy plus fuzzy lines appear in some areas of shots.  These lines don't show up when I view my edited footage in the timeline, only after exporting.  I'm fairly new to this all and know I'm not using the best settings to retain the most quality because the beginning and end quality look very different. 
    I don't do heavy duty editing or effects at the moment.  Basic color correction, slow-motion, preset effects, transitions, music and titles.
    ANY help relating to what my settings should be across the board to retain the best image possible is greatly appreciated.  I can't seem to figure it out with trial and error anymore and thought I'd turn to the experts for help.
    Thanks!
    Smalls

    I've set the viewer to both fields.  I guess I don't know why I was transcoding.  I thought it somehow optimized the video.  Could part of the reason the quality drops be because I transcoded the video when I didn't need to?
    When I export, these are the settings I use and then export to QuickTime.
    Here is an example of the noise and lines that show up after exporting the video.
    It's not like this in the viewer while editing EXCEPT when I change playback quality to High Quality.  Any idea why?
    Also, these are my settings when importing the video.  What should be changed other than deselected the Transcoding options?
    I really appreciate the input.  Thanks!

  • Exporting the film in best quality for further editing

    I am about to finish a 52-minute long documentary in Final Cu Express. I've been editing in HD, using Apple Intermediate Codec1080i50.
    Part of the project files and render files are in an external G-Raid and other part are on my Macbook pro hard drive, Since I will be traveling, I would like to be careful and minimize the risk of something happening either to the G-Raid or to my Mac, therefore, I want to export the film as it is, although in the future I still might need to work on it - do some more final editing and definitely do the subtitles in DVD Pro (currently I don't have the DVD Pro). My question is whether I should be using export - quick time movie or quick time conversion - and what the settings would be for the best quality product that could be used in documentary film screenings and possibly shown on TV? Or how should I go about saving the project? Right now the project file only has references to the files, right, not the files themselves and if something happens I might lose it all...
    Thanks for the help!

    QuickTime Movie. Forget the render filed, they seldom reconnect properly; it's usually better just to re-render. Keep your G-RAID and make sure it is backed up together with your project.

  • Export settings for best quality for pages with letters etc.

    Hi, I am trying to make video of a musical piece, featuring the score of the piece with pages turning following the progression of the music. I made the video in Adobe After Effects CS5 and exported it so it would be lossless. The video itself is a .mov file and looks great when I view it in Quicktime, but when I import it into FCE the quality goes down a bit. I don't know if FCE is handling the clips correctly or if it's just for making it quicker to view. Any suggestions on export settings from FCE for best quality of a video of this nature, so that the notes are clearly readable.
    Thanks in advance
    Ps. It has to be in a format suitable for Youtube.

    Under "Sequence" and in "Settings" and in the tab "Render Control" I have: Frame Rate: 100% Resolution: 100%.
    If that is what you were referring to... but under the tab which is called RT and is located left of the timeline and left of the timecode. There I have checked : Safe RT, (Playback Video Quality) Dynamic, (Playback Frame Rate) High.
    There might be a way to import the clip in better quality (so it doesn't downgrade the quality).
    Was mostly trying to find out with the export but it might have something to do with this.
    Thanks

  • Best path for HDV video to Apple TV.

    I use a Sony HDR-HC1 HDV to record videos and need to know the path to Apple TV that will provide the best quality. I’m showing these on a 50 inch Fujitsu 1080i Plasma. I edit the video in Imovie-HD.
    Can someone tell me what the best settings are to export from iMovie-HD into Quicktime or iTunes. I understand that Apple TV doesn’t support 1080i, so I’m wondering what are the best export settings to use to achieve the highest quality video through Apple TV.
    I used to have a Roku Picture bridge that displayed exported ts files beautifully, but it died.
    Thanks for any and all advice.
    Ken

    you understand incorrectly.
    appletv supports 1080i.
    but since 1080i is only 540 lines vert resolution,
    you should probably output at 720p
    Okay, thanks for the correction.
    Do you know if I can choose to export to 720p from iMovie-HD?

  • What is the best format for HDV video for a computer playback

    Hello guys,
    I have made a very nice HDV video and after the frustration and awful results with compression for
    SD DVD, I have decided just to export that video as a file, put that file on DVD, so people can just pop that DVD into their computers, copy that file on their HD and play it. (so there is no compression needed for over internet data transfer, Bit Rates for space, etc). The video is
    HDV 1080i 60. If I export it from FCP as a QT Movie the quality is beautiful. But when being watched on the computer screen, there are those interlace lines visible, when any faster motion in the video occurs. So I am wondering, what would be the best export option in order to provide best qualities for computer playback. Would it be some of those QT progressive modes, like 1080 p24? Or any other?
    Thank you for your help.
    Cheers,
    K.

    Chris Walsh1 wrote:
    Why are you using FCP 6.02? Why didn't you do the update to 6.04?? I did, and I am having tons of issues
    That is pretty much the reason. It is fresh out the gate and so far untested. I am not an early adopter of any new technology (soft or hardware wise). I like to wait it out and see what other peoples' experience is. A bit of a prickish way to put it is: "In Chess, the pawns go first." (I'm a big Chess nerd -- I have Chess analogies for just about everything).
    But even if the latest FCP, OS X and QT versions were humming along without any reported issues by the "power users" (by that I mean people who are editing on their systems 40+ hours a week in a professional capacity) I still wouldn't have upgraded because I am in the middle of three projects.
    Well, that isn't entirely the truth. I started all three projects on a PowerMac G4 running OS X 10.4.11 and FCP 5.1.4. In the midst of this I started an across-the-board upgrade -- new computer, monitor, OS and FCS. But what I did (am still doing) is migrating from one to another and testing the performance on the new one before committing. In doing my research before hand, I see that the magic cocktail for stability appears to be OS X 10.5.2, FCP 6.0.2 and QT 7.4.5 so I built my new MacPro to that and stayed there. I have migrated all my current projects to the new system and have been putting the new setup to the test and is passing at every turn, so I feel confident I can work on this new system and will be retiring the PowerMac soon, but throughout this process I always had my stable G4 setup available so I wouldn't risk losing any work.
    Might the reason the video you compressed "looked great" be because you didn't do the update?
    Maybe, but I can't say with any certainty.
    In the old compressor, I had no problems (in earlier versions of my project) compressing the video. It always looked GREAT! In 3.03, I get weird issues that don't make sense to me at all.
    In the older version of compressor, this never happened. Even on this project.
    Then I would think the update is the likely culprit.
    Here is what I would like to try as my final attempt. I just bought yet ANOTHER computer. A Mac Pro/Two 2.8GHz Quad-Core Intel Xeo. I'd like to try to load Final Cut Studio on this machine, but where should I stop my upgrading? What is good stable working system for everyone??
    OS X 10.5.2, FCP 6.0.2 and QT 7.4.5 is working great for me, and it appears for others here as well. I am running a new octo-2.8GHz Mac Pro.

  • Best quality for DVD playback!

    I just finished a film i shot in HDV my sequence properties are:
    Vid Rate: 29.97fps
    Frame Size: 1440x1080
    Compressor: HDV 1080i60
    Field Dominance: Upper Odd
    what is the best why to export this sequence onto a dvd for maximum playback quality?

    Hi there,
    1)make sure you export your movie in FCP as QT movie self-contained
    2)Import it in Compressor
    3)In the Settings tab (lower left window) Open Apple>DVD10 groups>choose DVD 90 minutes best quality and drop that folder on your video (upper left batch window). Compressor will encode your movie as Mpeg2 video an AC3 dolby stereo. In the inspector window you can change a number of settings if you wanted to but, if you are not familiar with Compressor, leave default settings to see if you are happy with the result (take sometime to read the very useful PDF manual that you can find in the main menu>help)
    4)Choose destination
    5)Submit
    G.

  • Best quality for burning to DVD?

    I've created a video project for a friend - home movies, scanned family photos, etc., with narration and music. Some of the images are pretty good quality, some not so great, but it's okay. I now want to burn it to a DVD - what's the best quality way to do that? Is there a compression type better for this than others?

    Just export from FCE to QuickTime Movie.  DO NOT export to QuickTime Conversion if the ultimate purpose is to create a DVD.  iDVD or other DVD authoring software will take care of the necessary encoding for DVD.
    To save time & disk space, when you export from FCE you can UNcheck the option called "Make movie self-contained."  This will create what is called a QT Reference Movie, which you can import into iDVD or other DVD authoring software just the same as any other QT Movie.
    One more tip - before exporting your movie from FCE be sure to do the following to actions.  This will make your export go more smoothly and help maintain quality overall:
    Sequence > Render All > Both and
    Sequence > Render Only > Mixdown

  • To get the best Quality for YouTube?

    Hi there.
    I have a question.
    Which settings do I have to have in the media encoder in pro cs3, to get the best quality in a YouTube video?

    I found this discussion from almost a year ago:
    Drogba, "My YouTube video looks blurry using Adobe Media Encoder" #, 20 Oct 2007 10:32 am
    ...but the suggestions discussed there didn't help me, so I'm hoping someone reading this thread has other ideas. YouTube's PixelDestroyer® and VideoFracker® technology does an effective job of making my good footage look like it was shot through a thin film of mashed potatoes.
    The H.264 codec seems to have ruination as its primary purpose. And the iPod and flv settings aren't much better. Heck, even if I export to mpeg (either keeping the native 720 x 480 resolution or shrinking to 320 x 240) my produced mpegs look great -- but once YouTube gets hold of them, they look like
    dreck.
    Sure, Vimeo or WhateverOtherTube service may have better quality, but when someone wants to search for a video, there's only one site that anyone thinks of going to. That's why Google bought them.

  • Best Uncompressed for HDV 50i?

    Hi there,
    I did a video in FCS2, its an HDV 50i project and I have to deliver in the best quality possible for computer, its to be reedit, what settings should I use??
    Cheers
    Javier

    Depending on the speed of your computer 5 hrs sounds like something it might say. H.264 is highly compressed and to top it off you're adding frame controls which take even longer because you're analyzing every frame. Use the uncompressed 8-bit or the ProRes codec. Those should be fine. Actually just try the ProRes and use frame controls. If you do this it will take a long time, not as long as H.264 but frame controls settings add a lot of time. Is this video going to be outputted to a DVD in the end? If so, you need to try to make one now and see if you even notice the jagged edges on an SDTV. You're seeing this because interlaced video on a progressive monitor don't mix very well.
    Try the ProRes and if you really need to change the frame controls. Also try it without enhancing them and just changing it to progressive.

  • Best quality for SD movie into iDVD

    I just finished creating a movie in iMovie '09. It was originally recorded with a Sony 8mm camera and passed through a Sony DV camera into my MacBook.
    I've added the titles, transitions, chapter marks, etc. The movie is about 50 minutes long.
    What is the best way to get it into iDVD and retain the best quality possible?
    Should I "share to iDVD" or export as a QuickTime movie and then drag that into iDVD? Which settings would be the best for that choice?

    You can actually convert them AFTER you've moved them in. When you captured them from the camera, they were saved into DV format. You can use mpegstreamclip (free download) to convert the DV clips into AIC or M-JPEG. If you do it correctly, the next time you start iMovie it will import the AIC-based clips in as well. Then, when iMovie reads them into your project and eventually renders the final movie, it will handle rendering better with AIC or M-JPEG clips as the source material.
    I understand needing to work with what you have; it is a pain to go and replace each clip, clip by clip, with new clips. However, I have very little experience with DV. I've been using mpeg clips from a HDD camcorder for over a year and have only just started using DV as I am now also shooting with a higher-end DV camera for church projects.
    I wish I could give you advice on how to export your project so iDVD can make the best DVD from it, but all of my work to date has been exported into movie files and played onto a HD TV through a laptop using QT or presentation software.

Maybe you are looking for

  • Photoshop CS4 and PowerPC G5 GeForce 6600

    I get frequent alert from Photoshop CS4 regarding display driver which say's to check for driver update and that Open GL 2.0 is not available and that GPU is turned off. I can work in the photoshop but a few things are slow and look is not that great

  • Bad playback with 2-monitor setup

    I've got a working 2-monitor setup connected through my ATI X1900 (a Viewsonic A91f+ and a 50" Sony VGA LCD). When I choose to view playback through the Sony (All frames, Digital Cinema Desktop Preview-any setting), the preview only shows the frame w

  • How do I print a week of calendar events as a list

    How do I print a week of calendar events as a list?

  • DW FACT table/Structure ??

    Hi Everybody, It is a great forum. Thanks for your replies/suggestions to my earlier posting. I am hitting FACT tables design by several folks over the period of time. It is puzzling me. I like to bounce this table in this forum to get your ideas/tho

  • How to reduce file size when using batch processing?

    I use File > Process Multiple Files to batch process photos to a smaller file size along with adding my watermark.  I've played with many different settings and no matter what I choose, I can't get my average file size to be less than about 200k.  Ho