SyberiaWinx wrote:For one, that is the rudest response I've ever seen. Don't even bother trying to "help" if you are going to act like that. And your response is not helpful.
I'll break this down:
You want to do
A: Fitting the scenes as they are as closely as you can together without losing any of the picture of either clip, including the black borders. There simply isn't a good way to do this, and if you try, it won't look good.
I'm telling you that the standard is
B: The images I showed you. There is no way to make the 4:3 footage match the 16:9 footage without cropping some of the picture of the 4:3 footage, or by letterboxing the 16:9 footage to 4:3 as I have shown you in the pictures I have posted.
This is reality. It is not opinions I share, but video quality and video standards
facts. You have asked what the best way is to accomplish the merging of the two sources, and we have replied. There simply is not another way to go about this. Now, I can give you the avs scripts or the list of vdub filters to accomplish the steps I have outlined, but I won't help you do something completely ass-backwards. And neither will anyone else.
The snappy comments from other posters demonstrate the frustration we all have. Some of us are just better about holding it in. Teachers and instructors get frustrated with pupils; I know, I'm an English teacher, but we still have to respect the feelings of our students. However, there comes a time when a teacher must be clear that there is a right way and a wrong way to perform a task. I have shown you the right way, please do not ask me to help you learn the wrong way.
