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Best-Quality Export to DVD and miniDV Tape
I’m finishing a 10-minute congratulations video for an association’s awards dinner. It’s a DV-NTSC project, edited on FCP 6. It’s got original DV footage we shot, b-rollish dv stuff we were given; pretty high quality photos; and some material we ripped from a non-commercial DVD using MPEG Streamclip. It’s got two Livetype titles, plus a few lower thirds, done with the text generator in FCP. It’s got a bunch of transitions, mainly simple dissolves. It has two or three effects, and some minor motion stuff – pushing in on photos, making photos move across the screen. All in all it’s a pretty simple project. The only weirdness with the audio is that I’ve used some mp3 files and rendered them so they’re playable. If necessary, I could easily convert them to AIFF in iTunes and reimport them.
I am told that the client wants a DVD and a miniDV tape of the video. I guess he hasn’t decided how he’s going to play it. He says he’s going to display it on a rear projection TV screen, whatever that exactly means. That’s all he’s been willing to tell me, so that’s all I know.
Yesterday, my producer watched the DVD I made by exporting my sequence to Quicktime (all default settings) (NOT QuickTime Conversion) and burning the QT file to a DVD using Toast Platinum. She said there was a lot of shakiness/stuttering in the video when she played it in a DVD player connected to a TV. I saw none of this in FCP. She said the audio levels were all over the place (but the mix was OK when I played it in FCP).
Here’s the question: Knowing what you know (which is what I know), what is the best way (i.e., with the highest quality) to export my sequence to DVD and miniDV tape? With the fewest video and audio glitches, best handling of transitions, titles and effects, etc.?
Thanks for any advice.
Giraut