Forum Replies Created

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  • Tried the scale effect but it does create the same artifact.
    I created a Premiere Project illustrating this:
    In the project, I added a marker to compare between 3 tracks:
    Track1: track with built in speed mod (+105% from original) & rendered
    Track2: original video with a +105% speed adjustment added
    Track3: original video with no speed adjustment added

    Track1 FX: Crop top 0.5% fx (disabled)
    Motion_Scale@100.5% (disabled)
    If you enable either of these 2, the issue appears, even in the playback monitor (before even exporting)

    Track2 FX: Crop top (disabled)
    Enabling the crop fx looks fine in Premiere’s program monitor, but exporting with fx + that 105% speed change will create that frame blending issue too

    Track3 FX: Crop top (disabled)
    Enabling the crop fx looks fine in Premiere’s program monitor
    Exporting with the fx and no speed change is fine, but then that annoying line on top of the video is still there.

    If you look at the line on top of the original video (looks like an interlacing artifact although it is a blackmagic design capture file that should create 1080p), you will see why I want to crop projects on the top, as it generally gets rid of that issue. However, with speed adjustments, not all projects it seems though, frame blending appears and gives horrible artifacts.

    I will upload the project in question shortly
    In the meantime, here are 2 screenshots showing the issue

  • The weird thing is:
    Even after the speed change is adjusted on my clip(if say I wanted to speed up the video in premiere), exported (without crop effect) onto a MotionJpeg avi, then re imported into premiere, which means the new video already contains the premiere speed change, the minute I add a crop effect (0.5% top crop zoom), some of the frames get then blended on screen with the next one.
    If I deactivate the crop, no bother.
    So strange.

    The reason why I add crops is because the produced files from the telecine have a white bar on the top, as an interlacing bar, very thin, which can easily be got rid of by a crop zoom @0.5% on the top.
    What the problem is, is that this seems not to go well with speed changes…

  • ok
    Thanks
    Not animation, cine transfers.
    What I am also after finding out is that the combination of crop/zoom (even 0.5% off the top) along with speed change creates those artifacts when a speed change alone doesn’t.
    Maybe I should upload a sample project on dropbox for you to see.

  • What I am trying to do is adjust the speed of the film to achieve correct motion of the subjects (some sections would have been shot at slower framerates, some other at faster ones).
    Premiere somehow seems to create actual artifacts when doing that.

  • Sorry I didn’t formulate this properly.
    Film being shot usually at 12, 15 and 18fps, the scanners used will scan frame by frame to re-render a 25fps PAL file with non blended frames here and there to have fully progressive playback.

    However, when tweaking those files speedwise, it appears that the export function blurs up frames here and there from the blending process. As a result, the exported videos appear nowhere near as sharp as the original, or what plays back in the premiere project window.

    I guess that if Premiere had an option to disable frame blending when changing speed (FCP allows to disable the image-fusion mode), this issue would probably be solved.
    The only thing is, I don’t have a mac and would rather work on Premiere.

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