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Should I expect to see a higher quality picture if I burn my standard def video projects (from 8mm cassettes and mini-DVs) to Blu-ray disk, than to DVD (when viewed on an HD TV)? I don't have a Blu-ray burner, but would get one if it means a better final product. Jim
Hi Jim !
I have got loads of old footage going back to Super8, through VHS, sVHS-c DVD, and now AVCHD and the difference in picture (and sound - where it exists at all) is breathtaking. But in terms of the value of the images, you don't get much more precious than being able to watch and hear and remember your Dad's reaction to your now-thirty-five-year old Finance Director's first emergence as a newborn ! Absolutely priceless.
In my humble opinion, spend as much as you can reasonably afford "up front". Whilst various programs will claim to enhance old footage, there is no substitute for
good old footage ! Quality does not grow back. So capture every last ounce of information that you can. And save it
securely. And
back it up. It may well be that transcribing analogue A/V to digital is best done by professionals for you in preference to by you. This is what I meant by "spend your money up front". It seems to me timely to consider what "priceless" means to you!
My Dad dancing with the aforementioned was shot on equipment that cost £1250 which, coincidentally, was half my gross annual salary. So what is this footage worth to me now? And, before answering, please remember that you cannot retrieve quality that was not there in the first place.
Then, once you have the best possible quality origination digitised, you can edit and enhance away to your heart's content. Every "enhancement" action involves some change to the original, so what you do is worth careful thought.
1920x1080p Hi Def TV is utterly brilliant (and, by the way, on paper already BEYOND the capabilities of Blu-Ray). My guess is that in a few years' time, Blu-Ray Disk recording will be as unbelievable as recording on wax cylinders. Some solid-state storage devices (possibly SD cards or their successors) will have made Blu-Ray ancient history.
So what does that mean for us here and now? Well, DVDs played through a modern upscaling player outputting to HDMI are really quite high enough quality. And you can get your material quite satisfactorily on to DVD via the HQ option in Cyberlink. A standard DVD only holds about an hour of HQ video, but my patience holds less. My old films were less than 5 minutes long. Spliced together I could get a reel with 30 minutes on it. Two reels and my audience was more than happy to kill to escape !
In all this verbeage, what is my advice? Spend as much as you can on preserving quality to digitising analoge A/v material. Power Director 10 with a computer such as yours will produce brilliant watchable priceless video, but mot to the ultimate quality standard.
What will?
[Pleaseplace your bets here...]
BigEric
(Like any complex skill, good videography gets easier with practice. And talent. And planning. And a love of the process)