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Encoding in Premiere for DVD Output
Hi All,
I’ve been going through a series of tests to determine the best encoding settings to use for projects renderered out of AE, and edited in Premiere. Bear with me if you don’t mind. I prefer to encode out of premiere rather than encore because often there is a timeline with a bunch of clips. To do it in Encore I’d have to first render the timeline, then import, then encode in encore. Here’s what I’ve found so far :I’m using MGEG2-DVD Format at the highest quality. The original material was field rendered (or was video captures which have fields) out of AE. When I set the Field order in the encoder settings to Progressive, the eventual DVD output looks great (motion and edge quality) but not on all of our DVD players. We have 3 different types. It looks great on a sharp DV-MX1, and a Panasonic (don’t have the number), but on our sony’s (we have 3 DVP-NS575P’s) the motion looks strobed. It looks like the fields are either reversed, or just not playing back well. If I use the lower field setting (either with or without the deinterlace button checked), the motion on all players looks good, but I get an ugly distortion around the edges – exactly the same way after effects footage looks when it’s deinterlaced prior to rendering with fields. I’m not sure what good the field setting is in the media encoder if you can’t get clean results using that. I guess I’m wondering if other people are using progressive encodings, or using field settings. If you’re using fields, what have you done to get a clean output. Secondly, does anyone have any experience with either the Sony DVD player mentioned, or similar machines that had playback problems with field rendered stuff?
Two additional notes : All of this was played back on high quality NTSC monitors, not the computer screen, and interestingly enough, the sony with the problems played back the video fine in areas where there was no field rendered material.Any thoughts would be great. This is driving me nuts.
Sincerely,
Michael Goldberg