Okay I just made a diagonal line with 3 different lines from very slight slope of maybe 5 degree angle, medium slope of approx 45 degrees and steep of about 80 degrees. I exported the the lines image made in title tool as a jpeg. When I import that back in as odd upper field first it plays back with a smooth line on the slight slope. When I import the same still as even lower and play it back the slight slope line is broken and jaggy. That is what I was expecting to see. I don't know what to say either. I didn't really access the vertical shift but it behaved as I would have expected. This is playing SDI out to a moderate Panasonic LCD screen in an Avid 1080 59.94 project.
I can suggest that perhaps the line you used was too steep. I didn't notice much difference in the steeper lines. Also the difference was only noticeable in play. When parked on a single field there was no difference for obvious reasons. I'm not trying to be right here but I did see the behavior I had expected to see. The bottom line is as already said the temporal studder/judder is way more noticable that this slight stair stepping.
---In avid-l2@yahoogroups.com, <speckydave@...> wrote :
On 9 November 2015 at 17:41, bigfish@... [Avid-L2] <Avid-L2@yahoogroups.com> wrote:What monitor did you view the diagonal line on? Was it an external sdi feed monitor or the computer screen. It was mentioned in this thread that you can't see the reverse field order on the computer monitor so I wonder it that might mask something. I just don't see how if field 2 plays back first it has to be scanned at a field one time that mean the video information is filling the lines for field on which are offset from field two. Not sure how the half line start would play into it.
---In avid-l2@yahoogroups.com, <speckydave@...> wrote :Just tested this on a broadcast monitor by adding a big diagonal line across some upper-field HD footage. Exported as QuickTime ProRes upper-field, which I them imported into Premiere and played back: smooth motion and no aliasing while interpreted as upper-field. When I switched the interpretation to lower-field, I got all the horrible shuddering from fields being played in the wrong order, but the static diagonal line showed no aliasing at all.I would say your assumption about fields being re-positioned is wrong. When someone mis-interprets upper-field-first footage as lower-field-first, they just get the fields played in the wrong order. That's it. No re-positioning. Just (in this case) the lower field played first, then the upper field.
I would have thought that to take the upper field and shift it down a line to the lower field position and vice versa would be quite a deliberate process. I can't right now think of a way to *accidentally* tell the system to actually reposition the fields like this (though since there generally tends to be a way to easily screw anything up, I don't doubt that it can be done with a single bad keystroke...).D.On 9 November 2015 at 01:24, bigfish@... [Avid-L2] <Avid-L2@yahoogroups.com> wrote:If the fields are in reverse order then they are not playing in the same field the are intended for. Think of a diagonal line. I am assuming that with wrong field order Field 2 plays first and is positioned on the lines intended for Field 1 and Field 1 plays second in the lines intended for Field 2. That would mean the horizontal scan lines are inverted too. To me that would create the stair stepping even on a static frame.
Posted by: bigfish@pacbell.net
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