![]() ![]() This stuff is not detailed in Pinnacle manual that I can find and sifting through user posts and YouTube has not nailed answers (that I find so far) Any of Image 2 and 3 that I should consider saving as? So any editing and saving to same format does not lose image quality? (again image #1 - "same as timeline") There is a check box "always re-encode entire movie" that I don't know whether to leave unchecked?ģ. Should I kick it up to 1920*1080? Will that fill more of a TV screen?Ģ. The exported file still appears slowed down. Why 24 FPS comes up on the export profile on Pinnacle is lost on me. I followed posts about the Wolverine 20 FPS and slowed the video by 20% to get 18 FPS (or at least motion seems natural at that reduction - too fast after capture). If I click same as timeline I get the values in image #1. Wanted to know if aspect ratio matters for a TV and what it does to DVD. I'm willing to save different versions for archival purposes but the array of choices gets a little nuts (see image 2 and then continued into image 3)ġ. Guess a want to know what saves keep the best versatility. I am happy with short answers "click this" or a link or a detailed schooling answer! Ha Just want to save in the best way given the Wolverine limitations. Unless some future generation family historian comes along, these films are just for me to remember folks. Q: Should I archive in AVI? Do you guys do that? If it records in mp4 the quality is, what it is? - or does my edited project SAVED AS MP4 A SECOND TIME diminish quality and I should save as AVI? ![]() Q: Which of the above formats should I use? Q: I should maintain the 1440 by 1080 ratio? Would I want another ratio for a DVD or any Smart TV that allows a USB stick to play files? I get hung up when Pinnacle Studio gives me choices of how to export the project - mp4 choices that change size (and I can adjust size in these): It creates a MPEG-4 (HD?) movie file at 1080P/20 FPS (when I look at details of the file it is 1440 by 1080) The Wolverine MovieMaker Pro is absolutely adequate to digitize this stuff as mp4 to my eyes. The Super 8 mm film I have is not great (was it ever? Did my Dad just have the cheapest retail Kodak point and shoot?) I think I asked this Q 2 yrs ago in another forum and no answers. It doesn't enlarge it.I'm a retail mess-around user, I know I am stepping into a deep pond of video folks here. Time Stretch will slow down or speed up the playback of your video. ![]() (BTW, in your post you say you used "Time Stretch" to expand the video to fill your frame. There is no 4:3 high-def video format, so trying to editing it in high-def will mean either a) a video with black bars on either side of the video frame or b) a video that fills the frame but is cropped off on the top or bottom. I know that reduces the resolution a bit - but you're working from Super 8 movies, which isn't going to give you clean, sharp high-def video anyway. The other option is to download the free video converter Handbrake and see if it will convert this video to a more standard 640x480. Trying to use Premiere Elements to edit this odd video is going to just lead to headache after headache. ![]() The easiest and best solution is to edit this video with the software that came with the program and save Premiere Elements for video from camcorders and phones. That's a very non-standard frame size, and I'm not sure how or why your digitizer is outputting video at that resolution. You're not going to be able to do that in Premiere Elements. ![]()
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