On 9 Jan 2022, at 16:19, crispinmholland <crispinholland@gmail.com> wrote:Hello all. I'm digitising a load of old family PAL mini DV tapes using iMovie 10.0.5 on High Sierra 10.13.6 on my trusty Mac Pro 5,1 via Firewire, the beauty being that iMovie records continuously, but breaks each original clip into a new file and gives it the title e.g. 2007-08-16 15_52_43.mov - and as a person who loves accuracy and detail, this gives me great joy and delight.
However, as DV is quite old school, I fancy making the files a lot smaller using the newer h.264 codec at around 3 - 5mbps, BUT I am conscious that PAL DV is 720 x 576 with non-square pixels, but only 704? horizontal pixels are visible. BTW these files are just for posterity, not for future editing.
So, my question is, should I simply re-encode using h264 and keep all dimensions & pixel aspect ratio the same as per the DV PAL 601 standard? My only worry with this approach is that with future technology, the ability to interpret the rectangular pixel shape might fall by the wayside as time marches on.
The other option is this: should I try to wrangle the footage into pure 4:3 shape e.g. 768 x 576 with square pixels so that it will always display correctly? But then of course, there is the issue of 704 visible pixels, so presumably this will leave a small black pillarbox?
I have Adobe Media Encoder and I am also just trying out Shutter Encoder, although I can't find any reference to 'pixel aspect ratio' in the latter.
Two more things: Should I map to 0-255 levels? And, should I de-interlace? Oh learned ones, what settings would you use?
Thanks so much for any helpful advice!_._,_._,_
Sunday, January 9, 2022
Re: [Avid-L2] Recoding DV tapes #OffTopic
I'd definitely keep the DV captures. I think I'd then bring them into an HD project and transcode them to ProRes. Perhaps you could bring them into a 50p project for 'deinterlacing'. The blowup to HD (even if just 720p50) ensures you bring everything into the square pixel world, and you can easily export to H264 or H265 from there – and in my experience, blowups to HD yield better results when you upload stuff to YouTube and such. My 2 cts.
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