Exporting to dvd studio pro

What is the best way to export sequences to DVD Studio Pro for output to DVD Video (PAL), just for television viewing? Currently using quicktime movie, but are finding artifacts on both menus and footage. Pixel type flashs, not always in the same places (seems to alter each time I do a new build).
I have been told to experiment with Compressor, but there are so many options where do I begin? Also how does the sound work with Compressor, whats the best sound file to use, does it matter?
I'm using FCStudio5 (upgraded recently from FCPHD4.5. Everything used to work fine on old version, now seem to have continual problems.

The best way to export to DVD Studio Pro is using Compressor - it's also the fastest way!
If your footage orriginated in NTSC, export it directly to PAL. It will take a little longer as PAL (720 x 576 @ 25 fps) has higher resolution than NTSC.
It doesn't really matter what sound setting you use, as long as it is 192 Mbit/s or higher.
Then create a DVD Studio Pro using the PAL settings and bear in mind that the picture frame (including menus) is 720 x 576.
If you regularly send/sell matherial to Europe, it's much better to shoot it in PAL!

Similar Messages

  • Emergency questions exporting for dvd studio pro (ntsc and pal)

    Hi,
    I'm under a tight timeline and would appreciate any help possible. I'm experimenting with outputs/burning today so the real thing can happen tomorrow.
    I have an hour long project that was shot on two different kinds of cams -- a sony hdv V1U and pan dvx100b. The first shot mostly in 16:9, the second squeeze 24p. We imported all footage as non-hd though, because the V1u has had problems syncing properly with hd settings with final cut. The issue/question now is this-
    I don't know what file format (I'm assuming mpeg-4 for DVD studio pro, but using compressor or no?) or settings to use -- I'm used to mpeg-4, but for some reason it is coming out all grainy/pixelated and I'm not sure if I need to adjust the settings. Also, once exported into a usable/high quality format, I need to burn a ntsc dvd but also a pal dvd -- I've burned pal dvds on dvd studio pro before and know adjusting the settings is just in preferences, but I'm assuming the video will need to be converted into a different kind of file. Or no?
    My sequence settings are 1440x1080 (16:9), quicktime video settings compressor hdv 1080i60. When I export as a quicktime file the conversion is great and no problems, but that isn't workable in dvd studio pro.
    I would appreciate any advice you could offer,
    Thank you,
    Tenzin

    Thank you, I'm trying that -- someone else just mentioned it needing to be an mpeg 2 file as well. The trouble I'm having now in compressor is it isn't converting when I press submit -- nothing is showing up in the batch monitor. I've tried this directly exporting from fcp using compressor, as well exporting quicktime from fcp and then using the quicktime file in compressor.
    I'm not used to using compressor so I'm thinking I am not doing something properly in this process? Thank you for the suggestions, they are reassuring. Do you know if the same file produced by compressor can be used for the pal dvd?

  • FCP Export to DVD Studio Pro

    I am trying to export a QT movie file from FCP to DVD Studio Pro, but once it is in DVDSP, the file is too large to fit on a dual-layer DVD-R. Not to mention there are other files that need to be on that same DVD.
    I was told to always export it with CURRENT SETTINGS ..... but when I do, they are over 10GBs in DVD Studio Pro.
    Do I have to re-edit my movie to make it shorter? Its only a 45min HD Video. Or is there a setting I am missing here?
    Please help! Thanks so much.

    Yes, export with current settings. But you're leaving out the crucial step, which is creating the mpeg file that dvdsp needs. You can either make it in compressor or let dvdsp do it in the background while you author your menus etc. It's the same engine either way. But having dvdsp do it, while in one way simpler-- the controls need a lot more drilling down to find. Sorry if that's a convoluted sentence. Too many jelly beans.

  • Slideshow Export to DVD Studio Pro

    Is there a way in Aperture to export a slideshow that displays the file name at the bottom of an image so that it can be imported into DVD Studio Pro to be made into a chapter on a DVD?
    I really need to do this! HELP!!!!
    Kevin Hawkins

    First, export the shots you want to use.
    From there you can import directly to dvd studio pro and title them as a dvd slide show if you like. You can also do this with idvd.
    The dvd slide show format is limited to 99 shots, though and has some other limitations, (transitions), as well. You can break these by turning the shots into a movie, using something like imovie or final cut pro. Both also support titling.
    There are several stand alone programs for doing this too, including photo2movie, and still life, both of which have relatively low price tags.
    Search the dvdsp or fcp forms for more on this. Also search for "ken burns effect", which you may want to consider if you do this much.

  • Exporting for Dvd Studio Pro

    im trying to export students projects in my lab, what steps do i need to do to get them to work efficiently in Dvd Studio Pro. they are all on there own external harddrives.

    I think we need a bit more detail.
    Are you exporting footage from FCP?
    If so, you should look to encode it to MPEG2 before bringing it in to DVDSP if you want to have control over the encoding process. You could use Compressor, or you could use any other encoder that you wish, as long as it produces elementary streams for DVDSP.
    You could export from FCP using the Quicktime conversion OR the Compressor option.
    You might choose to do neither and simply use the .mov file in DVDSP and let DVDSP handle the encoding as you work (in the background) or when you build.
    Some more info would help

  • Film Export problem - DVD Studio Pro 4!

    I have a problem when exporting my dvd as .img file.
    The protokoll says (in german): Achtung: Die Datei „NAME-MPEG-2; 6,4 MBit/s; 2-Pass; 4/3.m2v“ im VIDEO_TS- oder HVDVD_TS-Ordner ist auf der fertiggestellten DVD nicht enthalten.
    means the original file is not included. what can i do?
    In my dvd studio pro document all data is imported and green light.
    Need help!

    It is probably a standard warning message to say that the file is not included in the video_ts folder - which is quite alright... you don't want that in there. When the video_ts folder is created it should only contain .vob, .bup and .ifo files. Anything else is technically 'illegal' to be contained there, and will be omitted.
    Does your burn complete? Can you play the disc?

  • BEST HD QUALITY SETTINGS IN COMPRESSOR TO EXPORT TO DVD STUDIO PRO

    I shot in HD, and edited with FCP. I am now trying to use compressor to make a DVD, but first I am trying to figure out what settings I should use in compressor to get the best quality for my DVD?? I wil be completing the DVD process in DVD studio pro.... Thank you!

    Unless you have HD-DVD media and an HD-DVD burner, you are doing an SD DVD. As in, what most DVDs are these days (Blu-Ray and HD-DVD still being quite cost prohibitive on the user end). If you have standard 4.7GB DVD-R or DVD+R this is SD DVD.
    As far as settings, depending on how many audio tracks you have and what format they are, I would take one of the two-pass MPEG-2 settings (e.g. MPEG-2 Best Quality 90 Minutes) in compressor, go to the Encoder pane -> Quality tab and raise the Average/Max bitrates. Set Motion Estimation to Best.
    Keep in mind you want all your bandwidth usage (audio, video, subtitles, etc) to go no higher than ~9.5Mbps lest you run the risk of players choking.
    If your HD source is real clean, even at the default 6.2 Mbps you should get great quality, but some extra bits in there will give more room to avoid artifacts...
    Hope that helps.

  • How to export to dvd studio pro

    I have a saved final cut pro project but i cant drag it into dvd studio pro.
    says incompatible format. This method works file in i movie
    help

    Just by reading the info provided in the original post, I'm assuming that they're trying to drag the fcp project file into dvdsp. The main thing to understand here is that iMovie and FCP are two completely different programs which work completely different. Final Cut PRO is exactly that, a professional editing application, where iMovie is a consumer level editing app. In order to really understand how FCP works is to read through the manuals.
    As for the proper workflows for DVD authoring, I'd recommend this site:
    http://dvdstepbystep.com

  • Exporting to DVD Studio PRo from FCP5 ....  Can't find answer anywhere..

    Sorry guys, but I have read about 2 hours worth of posts without any answers to my question that is driving me insane. My eyes are bleeding and I am tired of experimenting having to wait hours for exporting to finish just to find out it isn't good quality or not acceptable in DVDSP.
    Here is my deal and hopefully someone can help me resolve my issue.
    I shot in 24p HDV and edited in FCP5. Finishes project and now want to burn on DVD for friends and family =) End project is about 18 minutes long 720p
    Tried using QuickTime Movie export and "current settings" and the file ended up being like 370mb, which seems REALLY small, so I am not sure how to change "current settings," since I am convinced those settings are not the best quality.
    I then tried DCHDV PRO 24F in the alternate settings and I ended up with a 5.6gb file, which looked beautiful but too large for a DVD. I tried using compressor to make it smaller using m2v conversation but DVSP refuses the file. I would love to use a QuickTime Movie export that can get the file around 4gb and keep the GREAT quality and still be accepted in DVSP.
    So what I really need from someone out there is:
    What the best settings for exporting a 18 min HDV 24p movie from FCP5 to DVDSP losing the least amount of quality as possible?
    Poor quality to me is flickering credits, poor colors etc.

    I believe you have the fundamental misunderstanding of what is happening in this process.
    When you create a DVD, all video material - without regard to original format - is converted to a highly compressed MPEG2 format and the audio to either an aiff or ac3 format. The video and audio files are then mixed (muxed) together into a series of VOB files. The major controllers of final quality are: original footage quality, compression bitrate and the amount of motion within frames. The overall length has an impact on bitrate as the DVD spec was designed for a 2 hr limit. HDV presents it's own problems as the 15 frame GOP format is not simply converted to the SD NTSC format.
    You may want to spend time to understand how the mpeg2 compression works so you can make suitable adjustments if the result is unacceptable. It is a bit of a dark art but controllable to some extent.
    The easy setups available in DVDSP are a good place to start and each parameter within the compression process is adjustable.
    good luck.
    x

  • Export For DVD Studio Pro

    What's the best export setting for an iMovie that I will be including on a DVD-SP project. I posted a similar question in the DVD-SP forum and was told to use MPEG-2 as my export setting under the "Expert Settings" tab. However, I didn't see this as an option. What's the best setting to use for a DVD project. I was under the impression that MPEG-2 is the standard for DVD but don't know what to do to get that quality from iMovie.

    Well what -I- would do is a FULL Quality DV export from iMovie then use Compressor to encode to MPEG-2. Compressor gives you a lot more options and (arguably) better quality.
    Daniel C. Slagle
    Keeper of the "Unofficial" iMovie FAQ  
    http://iMovie.danslagle.com

  • Best quality export to DVD Studio Pro for HD

    Sorry if this has been resolved before but I am totally confused.
    I am using FCP with a Sony HVR-Z1E. I aim to make the highest quality clips on my dvds prefering to have many short high quality dvds than having fewer long low quality ones. I would be very grateful if someone would sujest the best setting for this or to create a new one.
    Thanks for any help
    Regards Alf

    Compressor has some presets for making high quality DVDs, I'd start with those. Take a short sample of your footage that you feel best represents the visual quality of the piece, and start testing different configurations. There is no one magical setting that is going to work for everyone. You'll also probably reach a point where you really can't tell the difference between one high bitrate and another higher bitrate. This can be a good indication that you've found the best quality option.
    Using CBR encoding will give you the highest, consistent quality, but larger filesizes. Using VBR will maximise your quality to filesize ratio.
    Do be aware that DVDs do have a bitrate limit of 9000 Kb/s. This includes both your audio and video. If you're audio and video bit rates add up to a sum greating than 9000 Kb/s, DVD SP will throw a weird error when you try to build your project.

  • FCP to DVD Studio Pro exporting help needed - desperatey......

    Hi.
    Please help me if you can.
    I am exporting a Quicktime movie from FCP for DVD Studio Pro 4. I chose the MPEG 4 option in the compression, make it best quality and bounce it. But when I look at the self-contained mov file, every time a person walks across the screen I am getting little lines on the light parts of the screen or a beating or sizzling effect in the dark parts. Basically it looks like everything is "alive" somewhat - objects like curtains seem to sizzle.
    Can someone guide me in the proper choices to make when exporting from FCP to import into DVD Studio Pro? There is not an MPEG-2 or M2V option, and the MPEG compression breaks it down to MPEG-2 or M2v upon import into DVD Studio Pro anyway.
    I guess I don't know how to get the best quality bounce from FCP, in order to have a file that is less that 4G in size. Can someone please advise?
    There are no directions on exporting FOR DVD Studio Pro in the Final Cut books, nor was there a FCP prep covered in the DVD SP books.

    Quick workflow from FCP -> DVDSP:
    In FCP, File Export QuickTime Movie
    Select DVD Studio Pro Markers in the Markers drop-down (leave other settings as is)
    Save QT Movie to your preferred location
    In DVDSP, import your newly-created QT Movie
    (You may want to confirm your encoding settings - both in terms of bit rate and whether
    you're encoding on build or have background coding enabled - prior to this step though)
    Best Quality workflow:
    In FCP, trash the render files for your sequence
    From the Menu, File Export Using Compressor
    Now, in Compressor, select the appropriate preset(s): DVD: Best Quality 90 Minutes - 4:3
    Optional: Delete the AIFF setting completely
    Select the appropriate destination(s)
    Optional: For the Dolby preset, alter Dialog Normalization (under the Audio tab of the Inspector) to -31. In the Preprocessing tab, alter the Compression Preset to None
    Click Submit
    Once the encode is done, import the .m2v and .ac3 (and/or .aiff) files into DVDSP
    It's only fair to tell you that since this produces (pretty much) the best possible quality from Compressor, it may take as much as 5x-10x as long as the 'quick workflow' detailed earlier. (Especially if you've set DVDSP to do a one-pass encode)

  • How to export subtitles create in DVD Studio Pro into a Quicktime file?

    Hi,
    My film was edited in Final Cut, then exported to DVD Studio Pro to make dvds. Subtitles were added in DVD Studio Pro.
    I need now to make a Quicktime file of the film for web streaming and the file still needs to include the subtitles (or the option to make them appear)
    but how can I export the subtitles (dvd studio pro type of files) to my Quicktime file, for streaming?
    I read that this is possible but how?
    Please help!!
    Thanks!
    Paula

    A DVD uses VOBSUB aka. idx/sub format subtitles which are bitmap images. QuickTime itself does not support this format but Perian can sort of allow them to work. However firstly Perian is Mac only, and secondly I would not expect this work in a web-browser. In fact I don't think there is anyway to control subtitles in a web-browser.
    If you have the subtitles in a text format, preferably .SRT format, then you may have more options but again I would think you would still have problem in a web-browser.
    In general terms, the best utility for adding text subtitles to a QuickTime compatible file is iSubtitle details are available here http://www.bitfield.se/isubtitle/index.html
    What would be possible would be to 'burn' permenantly the image of the subtitles in to the video. This means they would always be visisble even in a web-browser but could not be turned off. You would also be limited to a single language. There are several tools that could do this including Handbrake (to convert directly from the DVD), and SubMerge also from Bitfield.
    There are some tools for Windows that use OCR (Optical Character Recognition) to convert the bitmap subtitles in to text ones.

  • Exporting FCP movie for DVD Studio Pro

    I am finished with my movie. I am confused now on the exporting to DVD studio pro. How do I do this? My viewer also would like it to be in widescreen because they had just bought a HDTV widescreen.
    So how do I go about this. I have made many with iDVD but this will be my first with Studio Pro.
    How do I export for DVD studio Pro?
    PowerBook G4   Mac OS X (10.4.8)   2GB - 100GB Hard Drive

    The most important thing you can do to help us answer your question is to give us the specs on your project. Open Final Cut Pro and click into your sequence. Then go to the menu "sequence" and go to "settings" or simply hit a command-0 (the number not the letter). Then tell us the frame size and the compressor used. From that information, we can get a better idea on how to help you: it is best to start any post with this information.
    To export the best quality, go to file -> export -> QuickTime Movie...
    From there, export using current settings, include audio and video, and make sure the bottom two boxes are checked (recompress all frames and make self-contained)
    Once that file is created, import into DVD SP and you're done. Don't worry about compressor or other formats right now. This will give you the best picture with the minimum amount of headaches. Let us know how it turns out.

  • Exporting FCP for DVD Studio Pro

    I have finished my movie in FCP and now want to export to DVD Studio Pro. The movie is 13 min. long. What is the best way to do this? Also I want it to be in widescreen format for HDTV.

    Is the video currently 16:9, or is it 16:9 within a 4:3 sequence? What I do when I make a DVD is just export a Quicktime Movie, and that will be a multi GB file usually and then bring that into DVDSP. DVDSP will do all the encoding as far as what format to go into. BUT, someone will most definitely come on here and tell you to export using compressor and have it do the encoding. EVERYBODY has their own way of doing it, those are just two.
    Good luck,
    -Brian

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