Christian -
I agree that this was certainly the wisdom of 20 or even 10 years ago. I question whether this is valid today. What specific evidence do you have that a TV rolling off an assembly line today does this? I am not asking this rhetorically as a way to say you are wrong. I am asking this question as a real question. Do you know or have you heard that a modern TV still does 90% cutoff? It would be interesting to test. Maybe I'll do it tomorrow. I have three brand new top quality big screen consumer LCD TVs. Maybe I'll create a PS document with successive 10% increments of "borders" and then send that image through HDMI from my computer to each screen and see how much is actually cut from each one.
I agree that many "smart" web repurposers run their video through a filter that does the automatic 10% crop to match the assumed 90% safe action from TV.
Steve Hullfish
contributor: www.provideocoalition.com
author: "The Art and Technique of Digital Color Correction"
On May 19, 2012, at 12:27 PM, Christian Foerster wrote:
> Many TVs crop off 10% of the image when set to factory settings, so (sadly)
> 90% action safe is as valid as ever.
>
> Big distributors of Web content also crop off a certain amount of the
> TV-originated image when encoding it for the web.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Sunday, May 20, 2012
Re: [Avid-L2] PBS Safe Action/Safe Title Specs?
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