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4:3 or 16:9
RonH
Contributor Location: Norway (from Australia) Joined: Sep 05, 2011 10:13 Messages: 364 Offline
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Most of my projects are a combination of 16:9, 4:3 or other custom/freeform sizes through cropping etc. I always use the 16:9 Edit setting on Projects with some eg jpeg cropped to this size to fill a widescreen. Other, non 16:9 jpeg or videos display with varying size black screen borders.

What problems, if any, arise from using 16:9 and not 4:3 in a final dvd production ... why do Cyberlink say 'make sure your project aspect ratio syncs with the aspect ratio of your media'
Thanks
Ron CYa Ron (W10/i5gen8/Nvidia)
Someone famous once said: "We only have the 4th dimension of 'time' so that everything does not all happen at once"
HalCon
Senior Contributor Location: Charlottetown, PEI Joined: Mar 01, 2008 10:36 Messages: 719 Offline
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Ron,

As far as I know the warning is there to inform you there might be issues with the black bars showing at the edges of non conforming sizes.

I, like you, use a combination of various sizes in all my projects. If I dont want the black bars to show, I resize the clip/image to fill the complete screen. I, personally, do not crop images to fit the 16:9 aspect ratio before using. I just place them on the timeline, resize to fit the screen, then move the image around to get the shot I want.

I have never experienced any problems using this approach.

Hal


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RonH
Contributor Location: Norway (from Australia) Joined: Sep 05, 2011 10:13 Messages: 364 Offline
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Thanks Hal ... looks like I am doing the right thing then.
I personally have not had any problems with this approach or in the final dvd version ... plays correctly on my and others dvd players eg no 'short fat and hairy or long and thin people versions'. One of our long distance friends though gets the 'stretch version' so it must simply be their TV/DVD Player set up. I will try to guide them to fix it.
Ron CYa Ron (W10/i5gen8/Nvidia)
Someone famous once said: "We only have the 4th dimension of 'time' so that everything does not all happen at once"
James1
Senior Contributor Location: Surrey, B.C., Canada Joined: Jun 10, 2010 16:20 Messages: 1783 Offline
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Hi,
What I have done in my projects containing 4:3 ratio images/video in a 16;9 project is to overlay a PIP object that covers the black bars and corresponds to the theme (so to speak). Jim
[img]
[Thumb - top_bottom.png]
 Filename
top_bottom.png
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 Description
Frame hiding black bars
 Filesize
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 Downloaded:
201 time(s)
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RonH
Contributor Location: Norway (from Australia) Joined: Sep 05, 2011 10:13 Messages: 364 Offline
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Good idea, Jim. CYa Ron (W10/i5gen8/Nvidia)
Someone famous once said: "We only have the 4th dimension of 'time' so that everything does not all happen at once"
Carl312
Senior Contributor Location: Texas, USA Joined: Mar 16, 2010 20:11 Messages: 9090 Offline
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What I do is put a 16:9 Background image for the entire production. I put that image on Track 1 and all of the rest of the Videos on tracks 2 and up.

What that does, is if there are 4:3 or less that 16:9 wide images, the background will show behind where there would be Black bars.

The Background image can be anything from a plain color board or a fancy design. I like Clouds for some of my videos.

I go outside when there is a sky full of clouds and shoot 16:9 images. My Digital camera has 16:9 setting. Also, my Video Camera will shoot 16:9 stills.

Here is an example of that technique on Director Zone:
http://directorzone.cyberlink.com/video/11914550

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RonH
Contributor Location: Norway (from Australia) Joined: Sep 05, 2011 10:13 Messages: 364 Offline
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That is neat Carl ... I'm sold!
I forgot you can streeeetch most images over an entire project.
Being forgetful, I better now go and check if you can add a new Track 1 on top of everything else after doing all the editing
Thanks for this memory jog
Ron CYa Ron (W10/i5gen8/Nvidia)
Someone famous once said: "We only have the 4th dimension of 'time' so that everything does not all happen at once"
BarryTheCrab
Senior Contributor Location: USA Joined: Nov 06, 2008 22:18 Messages: 6240 Offline
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I have used the 16:9 backdrop many times to fill in 4:3 projects. Usually I will blur the image and add a barely detectable motion path. This, I find, does not distract from the focus of the image or video subject.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n5S-WT7p5uc&feature=plcp
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