eemil
8th April 2008, 12:23
Hello everyone!
I'm encoding many kinds of musicvideos to x264-mkv, but mainly they are from the 80's so they are shot with some kind of analog cams(very rarely some parts on 24fps film), then transfered to dvd on the new millenium maybe from these original masters, just don't know, hopefully someone does. Some of them are very high quality but then again some are very noisy and whatever... There are also a few mpeg2rips (dvd resolution) from vhs and laserdisc, so somewhat optimal settings for these too if they even differ from the settings for the mentioned above. And of course new videos shot on film or to digital form directly. :)
Feel free to categorize different types of material on your own way, and suggest filter(s) (and settings) to use to get optimal results
...but somewhat like: high motion, low motion, vhs, laserdisc, interlaced 80's stuff, digital (or HQ 35mm) source:confused:
I tend to keep aiming for 60% quality and resolutions for older (analog) material are 576x432, 512x384 and below and for newer material (digital, 35mm film) as high as possible ->(704 x yyy).
:cool:
I'm encoding many kinds of musicvideos to x264-mkv, but mainly they are from the 80's so they are shot with some kind of analog cams(very rarely some parts on 24fps film), then transfered to dvd on the new millenium maybe from these original masters, just don't know, hopefully someone does. Some of them are very high quality but then again some are very noisy and whatever... There are also a few mpeg2rips (dvd resolution) from vhs and laserdisc, so somewhat optimal settings for these too if they even differ from the settings for the mentioned above. And of course new videos shot on film or to digital form directly. :)
Feel free to categorize different types of material on your own way, and suggest filter(s) (and settings) to use to get optimal results
...but somewhat like: high motion, low motion, vhs, laserdisc, interlaced 80's stuff, digital (or HQ 35mm) source:confused:
I tend to keep aiming for 60% quality and resolutions for older (analog) material are 576x432, 512x384 and below and for newer material (digital, 35mm film) as high as possible ->(704 x yyy).
:cool: