http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sbktCuzHHX4&feature=related i mean from 0:10 to 0:35 that quality
PS:im not sure that this topic should be here
kickass331 wrote:follow the guides. Scintilla,Kitsuner, and godixZarxrax, and mirkosp are the go to gurus. I followed all their guides to the letter and now I'm top notch with quality, see my bleach movie amvs for it.
godix wrote:kickass331 wrote:follow the guides. Scintilla,Kitsuner, and godixZarxrax, and mirkosp are the go to gurus. I followed all their guides to the letter and now I'm top notch with quality, see my bleach movie amvs for it.
Fixed that for you. Honestly, how did I ever get in a list of quality gurus? Are you on drugs?
BlazingEdge wrote:Where can i find those guides ???
kickass331 wrote:do not use vdub or make stupid clips, buy a bunch of flash and hard drives to go with your main solid state disk
mirkosp wrote:kickass331 wrote:do not use vdub or make stupid clips, buy a bunch of flash and hard drives to go with your main solid state disk
Editing with lossless files directly is faster regardless. And clipping beforehand is a good way to focus on pure editing inside the NLE without thinking of the scene selection too. Of course, everybody has their preferred way to edit, but in no way is lossless clipping stupid.
mirkosp wrote:It is obvious that you leave the entire scene you need in the clip and not just cut the exact scene that you'll place in the timeline... you just need a rough cut. Also when you're done with a video, you're done with it. If you want to remaster an old project or finish an old one, chances are you'll want to overhaul the quality and improve the editing too... so perhaps you'd be picking different scenes altogether.
That said, I personally convert whole episodes/DVDs to lossless. I prefer to clip inside of premiere, but editing with the lossless is a must to speed up. Seeking a lossless is faster than seeking an avs that loads and deinterlaces a d2v.
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