Activity › Forums › Apple Final Cut Pro Legacy › 60i look in 24P timeline
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60i look in 24P timeline
Posted by Joey Foreman on September 11, 2007 at 2:07 pmMy client has a scene where the cameraperson accidentally switches to 1080i from 720P (the rest of the video). When the 1080i footage is dropped into the 24P timeline in FCP it gets converted to 24P. Is there any way to maintain the 29.97 video look?
Sean Oneil replied 18 years, 8 months ago 6 Members · 12 Replies -
12 Replies
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Jeremy Garchow
September 11, 2007 at 2:17 pmSO you are working @ 720p23.98 and you have a few shots of 1080i? Is that what you are saying?
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Walter Biscardi
September 11, 2007 at 2:40 pmNope. you can’t make 24 p look like 60i.
it works the other way around.
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Joey Foreman
September 11, 2007 at 2:49 pmThe 60i footage was shot in 60i. I just want to preserve its look when intercut with the 24P. I know for the dvd release i could possibly compress the two sequences separately and cut them back together in DVDSP but that is clunky and not the way I want to go. Does anyone know of a way to trick FCP into not converting it to 24P?
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Jeremy Garchow
September 11, 2007 at 3:16 pm -
Tom Brooks
September 11, 2007 at 3:52 pmIf I understand correctly, you need to output the finished 720p project with pulldown added and then reingest it to a 59.94 project (you could do 720p or 1080i). You can bring the 1080i into that without losing motion. Do you have a VTR that you can go out to and back in?
Final Cut Studio, FCP 5.1.4, After Effects 6.5 Pro, Quicktime 7.2, G5 Quad 2.5, Kona-LHe V3.4, 4.5GB RAM, Nvidia GeForce 7800-GT 256MB, G-RAID 2x1TB FW800, Mac OS-X 10.4.10.
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Matt Devino
September 11, 2007 at 4:00 pmI know in FCP6 that if you’re working in DVCPRO HD and you put your 720P24 footage in a 720P60 timeline it automatically adds pulldown without a need to render. You could do this then add the 1080i footage and scale it down, then at least it would be running at the correct frame rate instead of trying to convert to 24. It won’t make your 720P footage look any different because it always plays back at 60 anyway when on a TV. I don’t know if this works with HDV but give it a try.
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Joey Foreman
September 11, 2007 at 8:25 pmThat’s what i had begun to consider the best route. I’ll give it a shot. Thanks.
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Sean Oneil
September 12, 2007 at 2:34 am[mattdawgpro] “now in FCP6 that if you’re working in DVCPRO HD and you put your 720P24 footage in a 720P60 timeline it automatically adds pulldown without a need to render. You could do this then add the 1080i footage and scale it down, then at least it would be running at the correct frame rate instead of trying to convert to 24. It won’t make your 720P footage look any different because it always plays back at 60 anyway when on a TV. I don’t know if this works with HDV but give it a try.”
Yeah but it will still have the 24fps look, not the 30fps look that he wants.
I’ve seen demos of stuff that can do this. Generally used for converting stuff to 60fps. It literally creates frames that didn’t exist. It analyzes frame 1 and 2, and uses the difference to create a new “frame 1.5”.
Most of the stuff I’ve seen are for consumer playback devices. I don’t know of any professional tools for converting files with this process. Maybe a Teranex can do this (never tried going 24->30 before).
Jeremy,
I just checked out Fieldskit. I don’t think that will convert 24fps to a true 30fps, but I’m really happy you posted that link. It looks like a very useful tool for repairing video with broken cadence.
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