Hmm. I've been going through the trouble of deinterlacing 60i home videos that I captured via DV, so that eventually I can integrate the results into a 720p60 or 1080p60 home video of sorts.
Footage straight from minidv tape has gone well. The deinterlacer spits out 60fps video that I can use.
Footage captured as DV but which was originally on Hi8 tape.. has given me some problems. Specifically, when I scrub through the footage frame by frame, it is visibly bobbing up and down. In the 60fps timeline, one frame is up a bit, the next frame is down a bit, next is up, next down, etc. In full motion, it's perceptible enough to be distracting.
Now, the key difference here between the footage which worked fine and the footage which is giving me some problems is the fact that the problem footage was originally from analog (Hi8) tape, even though the file itself is a standard DV file like the others. The footage on Hi8 was interlaced, just as DV is. Here's where my knowledge breaks down into guesswork. Hi8 possibly uses a "resolution" which differs from 480i. However, fields in a given frame are treated basically the same in any format: half of the frame is one field, and half is the other. Top and bottom. If the difference in resolution was really such a big concern, then these videos wouldn't look watchable in a media player, yet they certainly are watchable, with no unusual phenomena such as the bobbing effect I'm getting by deinterlacing it.
So I guess my hope is that whatever problem I'm encountering is either commonplace or easily intuitable by the knowledgable folks in these forums, and a possible solution can be recommended. Thanks for reading.
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Update: Bizarrely, if I manually adjust the video's y position up and down 1 pixel every frame (in the 60fps timeline), the bobbing effect vanishes. Very curious.
As an interim fix, can anyone recommend an After Effects "expression" script which will adjust the layer's position up and down one pixel over time? I'm a bit lost when it comes to those things but I figure it's possible. -
Originally Posted by Colmino
Originally Posted by Colmino
Originally Posted by Colmino -
Thanks for the recommendation.
As it happens, I was able to develop a workaround to force the position of the video (in AE) to counter-bob based on where it was in the timeline. This caused the bobbing effect to vanish. I suppose I should be concerned that I have to do this with Hi8-sourced DV but not with minidv-sourced DV - it's distressingly counterintuitive - but the results work, and that was ultimately faster than probably any other solution that might develop. Blah. -
I don't understand why the MiniDV and Hi8 captures differ. How did you cap the Hi8 to DV format?
Did you identify your editing software? What is the processing chain?
I can understand a 720p target but what do you plan to do with 1080p? Why not 1080i?Recommends: Kiva.org - Loans that change lives.
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Originally Posted by edDV
Originally Posted by edDV
Originally Posted by edDV -
OK unchartered territory.
I'd suggest you edit some captured Hi8 source with MiniDV in DV 480i to verify the problem wasn't in the capture*. Any modern SD or HD TV can handle 480i or 1080i. Computer playback requires realtime deinterlace which can be problematic. 1080i source provides more PC display options.
*This also gives you a base of comparison for your upscale "improvements". In this case your opponent is the internal hardware TV display processor.Recommends: Kiva.org - Loans that change lives.
http://www.kiva.org/about -
It's true that any contemporary display can handle 1080i, but it's also a fact that deinterlaced footage is never as good as the non-interlaced original. I don't have concerns over whether or not displays can handle 1080p60. If anything, the facts that 1) the quality of deinterlacing varies from device to device, and 2) the process also happens to introduce video latency.. these weigh more heavily than any thoughts over 1080p60 compliance.
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Originally Posted by ColminoRecommends: Kiva.org - Loans that change lives.
http://www.kiva.org/about -
You might want to re-read your last post - it doesn't actually make sense. A) Deinterlaced footage and non-interlaced footage are the same, and b) your source is interlaced. Finally, while deinterlacers may vary from TV to TV, they are invariably, unless you have the cheapest no-name monitor dressed as a TV, better than any software method. I have yet to see any evidence of so-called video-latency from any reputable equipment, given interlaced footage has been with us since the dawn of television.
Read my blog here.
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Originally Posted by guns1inger
Originally Posted by guns1inger
Originally Posted by guns1inger -
Originally Posted by guns1inger
I don't understand your issue with latency. So what if the video delays a third to a full frame on playback display so long as audio is also delayed a similar amount. Latency issues are extreme through cable boxes vs. direct tuned analog stations amounting to seconds. The only issue is audio echo if you can hear both.
Software encoding has even greater latency when encoding real time as set by the buffer size. Real time software encoding is always a compromise.Recommends: Kiva.org - Loans that change lives.
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