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  1. Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    United States
    Search Comp PM
    I could play video in premiere pro without problem, but since I configured compressor(CODEC) to export movie from premiere pro, video playback has problem. I use DIVX 6.

    How can I do???



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  2. There is nothing wrong with your home video or Premiere Pro. It is probably just a coincidence that you are noticing these interlace artifacts after you installed DIVX. You wouldn't even notice these "artifacts" if you happen to pause on a frame with little or no motion. It just so happens that this frame has motion. Edit your video, burn it to a DVD and view it on your TV. Everything will look fine. I'm 99% percent confident in that. Let us know if not.
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  3. Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    United States
    Search Comp PM
    I found out why it has interlace artifacts on video. I inserted Larger still image picture between the video. The video resolution is 700- 540, but still image resolution is 800-800, that is why I had problem.
    When I converted the videot to FLV, it has the same interlace artifacts on FLV video.

    How can I change the still image resolution in premiere pro?? Is it best to do in photoshop CS2???
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  4. Member
    Join Date
    Apr 2002
    Location
    Oskeeweewee Ontario
    Search Comp PM
    Don't understand the question, or reasoning, but under the general settings, there's a little box that asks if you want to keep still images the same size as the project settings....

    This way, all your stills get resized to the project settings...
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  5. yunakokimama-
    I don't believe what you are seeing has anything to do with inserting a still image, at any size, or that there is anything "wrong" except that you are editing interlaced video. If you want to view the video on a PC monitor or other progressive display and do not want to see any of these combing artifacts then you will have to deinterlace the video. It sounds like a Flash video is your final product so you will have to deinterlace. If you were to view this video on a conventional (interlaced) television you would not observe these artifacts. Don't let what you are seeing on a computer monitor while editing your video influence you as to what it will look like when it is finally viewed on a television. Without a deinterlacing plugin for Premiere (there are no free ones to my knowledge) you might want to deinterlace your original footage in VirtualDub, then import that file into Premiere, edit it and save to Flash. Remember, deinterlacing is never perfect! You still may see some combing, or other nasty by-products in your final deinterlaced video.
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