- #5DTORGB FOR WINDOWS HOW TO#
- #5DTORGB FOR WINDOWS MOVIE#
- #5DTORGB FOR WINDOWS 1080P#
- #5DTORGB FOR WINDOWS MP4#
- #5DTORGB FOR WINDOWS SOFTWARE#
This is probably simple enough to fix though. I didn't realize this, but the original video was 1920x1088, not 1920x1080 as I had thought. It's like the contrast and saturation were increased by about +15 each. (I need to upload the video before too long so I don't think I have time to go completely lossless with the animation codec but I'll keep it in mind as a last resort)Īlmost ing those settings in the previous post I was able to get a video that didn't seem to have any visible quality loss when comparing two screenshots of the same frame between the original and the edited version, but there are three problems.įirst, for some reason the edited video is much darker and more saturated than the original, even though I didn't touch the video adjustments at all. These are all just (mostly) uneducated guesses on my part, though.which of these should be changed and which should stay the same in order to achieve the best quality? and finally I have "Prepare for Internet Streaming" unchecked. Then for "Export Size Settings" I just have "1920 x 1080 HD" selected with "Preserve aspect ratio using." and "Deinterlace Source Video" both unchecked. I didn't bother touching any of the hundreds of other settings in the window that comes up when the "Options." button under "Encoding" is clicked. of these settings I have Frame Rate set to Current, Key Frames set to Automatic, Frame Reordering checked, Compressor Quality set to Best, Encoding set to Best quality (Multi-pass) and Data Rate set to Automatic. Still unsure about the rest of the settings though.
#5DTORGB FOR WINDOWS MOVIE#
I also have a Macbook with iMovie '09 on it but I've never used it and have no idea how it works.Īlright so I'm once again exporting with Quicktime via iMovie and have "Export: Movie to Quicktime Movie" selected and in Options -> Video -> Settings I have x264Encoder selected.
#5DTORGB FOR WINDOWS HOW TO#
I have a vague understanding of how to use those programs.
#5DTORGB FOR WINDOWS SOFTWARE#
The video editing software I have on this computer consists of: avidemux, VirtualDub, VirtualDubMod, avisynth, Camtasia Studio 6 and Canon's Zoombrowser EX software (which I believe has very limited video editing capabilities).
As a bonus, I'd like to be able to add a simple transition in between the clips. So how can I fix this? Again, I just want to join these 4 HD clips and save them as one video without any loss in quality. Continue anyway?" and then when I select Yes another error immediately pops up saying "Crash - Press OK to build crash info." When I click OK avidemux closes entirely. As soon as I go to File - Save Video and save it I get an error message saying "Invalid audio stream detected - The audio stream may be invalid for this container.
#5DTORGB FOR WINDOWS MP4#
I selected mp4 because I read that converting MOV to mp4 is the best way to save losslessly. So far I've opened the 4 clips up in avidemux (selecting No for the 'H.264 detected/use another mode' window when I load them in), joined the 4 clips together with Append, selected "Copy" for Video and Audio and "mp4" for Format. Here is the video data for one of the clips, copied from MediaInfo: It would also be nice if I could add transitions in between the 4 clips.
#5DTORGB FOR WINDOWS 1080P#
Intermediate codecs also produce large files so they are not a good choice for footage storing.I have four video clips from my 5D Mark II camera that are 1080p MOV files and I simply want to combine the 4 and save it as one video - but I'd like to do so without any quality loss. Intermediate codecs and/or convertors do not (and should not) denoise and dither videos or batch apply any other preset filters to videos. some convertors may apply some filters to channels(like chroma blurring) but thats nothing one cannot apply by himself. Intermediate codecs offer nothing to colorgrading just by themselves. You have to process your videos to subjectively increase as luke said the perceptive quality of your videos and then save to an intermediate codec.(and there are workflows for that) The fact that they offer better quality than "delivery" codecs doesnt mean that you can increase quality by transcoding videos to intermediate codecs. Thats the only gain you have from transcoding to intermediate codecs. So you can edit and render your videos faster The files they produce are smaller size than uncompressed, slightly worse quality than uncompressed, bigger size than "delivery" codecs (like lets say x264) better quality than "delivery" codecs (that means less compression artifacts and things like that) and they also offer less complex and easier/fastter to decode compression than "delivery" codecs I have done various tests and i was not able to replicate anything like the red bike example.Ĭineform, prores, DNxHD are called intermediate codecs.