99% of beginners don't have common senseMinion wrote:you make a point on how it didn't go deep enough. i was depending a bit on the editor's common since.

Pwolf
You said that people should create images at 720x480:Minion wrote:i may accept missleading, as some people may have taken the examples provided as suggestions, but i don't see anything wrong. this is a guide for beginners, and people could get by just fine with my information.
true, a majority of my work is pre-press, but unlike web/print, video/print are similar in the demand for image quality (which i provided good information for)
Additionally, resizing video is not always done as a prerequisite to editing, and indeed does not have to be done that way. Which is why pre-deformation is sometimes useful.trythil wrote:That's useless and impossible if the imagery you are creating contains circular elements or anything else that requires maintainance of aspect ratio.Minion wrote:so then make your circle after you resize :roll:
That's a little misleading, actually.trythil wrote: 720x480 is also not a standard resolution on any video system, despite what DVDs do. See http://lipas.uwasa.fi/~f76998/video/conversion/ .
blinking and at 50 point size or greater.NTSC footage technically has a PAR of 0.911 and PAL has a PAR of 1.094 but we are going to work from the following principle - on a PC monitor, NTSC dvds need resizing to 640x480 to be 4:3 and PAL DVDs need resizing to 768x576. This is a simplified version of the truth but it suits us well enough.
[You may notice that NTSC is downsized and PAL is upsized - this is purely and simply to keep the vertical resolution the same in case someone uses these values on an interlaced source]