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  1. I have a few recordings that feature a bit of shaky camera, and whenever I try to patch together in an editor (VSDC Free Video Editor at the moment), the result becomes incredibly blurry whenever the camera jerk a little bit. The originals are shaky, but not unwatchable by any means. I've tried everything I can think of, frame rate (25 fps), resolution (720x576), bit rate (8000 kbps maximum), display aspect ratio (16:9), everything is identical, but however I try to convert, the result is a smeared piece of shit. What could I possibly be misunderstanding about video conversion?

    > Video ID : 224 (0xE0)

    Format : MPEG Video

    Format version : Version 2

    Format profile : Main@Main

    Format settings, BVOP : Yes

    Format settings, Matrix : Custom

    Format settings, GOP : M=3, N=12

    Duration : 59s 440ms

    Bit rate mode : Variable

    Bit rate : 7 836 Kbps

    Maximum bit rate : 8 400 Kbps

    Width : 720 pixels

    Height : 576 pixels

    Display aspect ratio : 16:9

    Frame rate : 25.000 fps

    Standard : PAL

    Color space : YUV

    Chroma subsampling : 4:2:0

    Bit depth : 8 bits

    Scan type : Interlaced

    Scan order : Top Field First

    Compression mode : Lossy

    Bits/(Pixel*Frame) : 0.756

    Time code of first frame : 00:00:00:00

    Time code source : Group of pictures header

    Stream size : 55.5 MiB (93%)

    Color primaries : BT.601 PAL

    Transfer characteristics : BT.470 System B, BT.470 System G

    Matrix coefficients : BT.601

    > Video

    ID : 224 (0xE0)

    Format : MPEG Video

    Format version : Version 2

    Format profile : Main@High 1440

    Format settings, BVOP : Yes

    Format settings, Matrix : Default

    Format settings, GOP : M=3, N=12

    Duration : 2mn 3s

    Bit rate mode : Variable

    Bit rate : 6 323 Kbps

    Maximum bit rate : 8 000 Kbps

    Width : 720 pixels

    Height : 576 pixels

    Display aspect ratio : 16:9

    Frame rate : 25.000 fps

    Color space : YUV

    Chroma subsampling : 4:2:0

    Bit depth : 8 bits

    Scan type : Progressive

    Compression mode : Lossy

    Bits/(Pixel*Frame) : 0.429

    Time code of first frame : 00:00:00:00

    Time code source : Group of pictures header

    Stream size : 92.8 MiB (93%)
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  2. Don't deinterlace it if you're going back to MPEG2 for DVD

    Notice how it was interlaced before, but progressive after ? Your program is probably applying a single rate blend deinterlace . 25 frames/s interlaced is 50 fields/s, so the motion is smoother than 25 progresive frame/s

    Code:
    Scan type : Interlaced
    
    Scan type : Progressive
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  3. I don't see deinterlacin anywhere, would that be on conversion or import? I don't really know what deinterlacing is
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  4. Originally Posted by IndianaP View Post
    I don't see deinterlacin anywhere, would that be on conversion or import? I don't really know what deinterlacing is

    I've never used that program, but for most editing programs, there will be a project or timeline settings, AND export settings. Make sure both are set to 720x576 25 frames/s interlaced

    It's a big topic, but at the most basic level, deinterlacing is converting interlaced to progressive . Use search if you want more info
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  5. Originally Posted by poisondeathray View Post
    Originally Posted by IndianaP View Post
    I don't see deinterlacin anywhere, would that be on conversion or import? I don't really know what deinterlacing is

    I've never used that program, but for most editing programs, there will be a project or timeline settings, AND export settings. Make sure both are set to 720x576 25 frames/s interlaced

    It's a big topic, but at the most basic level, deinterlacing is converting interlaced to progressive . Use search if you want more info
    I cannot find "interlace," "deinterlace," "progressive," or "scan type" anywhere other than the file description. I guess I'll have to move on to a different program. Thanks for the response though
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