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Activity Forums Avid Media Composer What’s with 16×9 in Avid?

  • What’s with 16×9 in Avid?

    Posted by Milton Hockman on March 2, 2008 at 2:19 am

    So when you want 16:9 in avid, you just right click on the source monitor and check the 16:9 option. It then resizes the window to scale the height down.

    if you have 4:3 footage in the source it just squishes it and to get it unsquished you can put a resize filter on it.

    To me the footage looks fine. Not stretched really. Am i correct?

    Does avid allow you to make 4:3 footage into 16:9 that easy?? Because in After effects and Final Cut Pro, 4:3 footage needs to be scaled up 30% to fit the frame, and it pixelates.

    I don’t understand why avid is different. Can someone tell me what i am missing here?

    I ask because I have 4:3 footage and am thinikkng i should just resize it in avid and export it so I can use it in a 16:9 comp in After Effects.

    Dave Schweitzer replied 18 years, 2 months ago 3 Members · 4 Replies
  • 4 Replies
  • Michael Phillips

    March 2, 2008 at 11:51 pm

    In standard def, 16:9 is done by the display device. If you want to intercut 4:3 in a 16:9 timeline, then you need resize it by cropping. Go to the reformat effect and drop a preset or better yet, the reformat effect. Select source and target and you have a nice easy pan & scan tool to define the region of the image for output.

    Michael

    Michael Phillips

  • Dave Schweitzer

    March 3, 2008 at 8:00 am

    I spend a lot of time doing DV25 in both Avid and FCP doing this and hands down the scaling in Avid using Reformat effects is of a higher quality than what I get in Final Cut Studio.

  • Milton Hockman

    March 3, 2008 at 2:06 pm

    yeah but can i just resize the clip to 130 height and export it to use in a 16:9 project?

    Motion Graphics Artist and Non-Linear Editor
    Software expertise include: After Effects, Avid Xpress Pro, Final Cut Pro, Dvd Studio Pro, Photoshop, and more.

  • Dave Schweitzer

    March 3, 2008 at 8:24 pm

    Of course you can. If you have any time to do a test out to your production monitor, try a resize (make sure to press the HQ button for optimal scaling) and then try a reformat. Then play them out to your monitor one after the other to see what looks best to you. Whichever effect you choose can then be dragged to a bin and applied en masse to all the other 4:3s in your sequence.

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