Quote:
Thanks Bif,
Your tip works but the position is not perfect. Try playing the same video in the 1st track and in the PiP (enlarged to match the 1st track image). Then cut parts of the PiP track so it alternates with the 1st track. You will see that it is almost impossible to have an exact match plus the image quality is different.
It just occurred to me that you are probably basing your judgment on what you are seeing in edit mode in the edit window. You cannot judge sharpness in that edit window in ANY of the editing packages I've tinkered with. You will always be dealing with a lo res image to start with.
I'm in the middle of learning PowerDirector by editing a project I couldn't work on in May so I'm doing my trials and experiments on the material I'm working with. The point is I made my judgment from a hi def render of part of the project (I frequently do test renders of part of a project to see what the finished version might look like). While the PiP cutaway is not the same image as is on the main track, I have reviewed the video clips enough so that I know about what their sharpness and image tone is like.
So when I say I see no degradation on the PiP track I am judging the clips performance from a hi def rendered version.
Exact positioning doesn't matter to me so long as I can completely cover the image on the main track. If running that kind of test is important to you, setup a small segment and go to PRODUCE and render it out to an AVI if you're working in standard def DV, or even to a 1280x720 or 1280x1080 WMV file just to see for yourself.
But beware of the "overfocus" syndrome where you study and study so much your eye starts seeing everything as not quite fully sharp.
My advice is don't worry about any "blurriness" you see in the edit window.
What kind of file format are you working from?
This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at Sep 04. 2008 17:55