Comments

Chienworks wrote on 8/31/2015, 7:30 PM
By using a sufficiently high bitrate.
astar wrote on 8/31/2015, 8:25 PM
Here you go:

https://vimeo.com/help/compression

Vimeo is nothing special, I think YouTube is actually surpassing them these days in terms of offering more bitrates, and resolutions. Vimeo gets a better look by offering 2-5Mbs more than YouTube in 1080-30p. YouTube is offering upto 4K60P and 128GB file uploads, which mean you can upload ProRes, XDCAM422/EX, DNxHD, AVCHD directly.

Just edit your project, and export to Sony AVC, and choose an internet profile that matched your project size. If one does not already exist, create one and set the bitrate to 20Mbs, and audio to 320Kbs. Upload to Vimeo.

Nothing to hard.
mark2929 wrote on 9/1/2015, 9:31 AM
Yes but vimeo has an upload limit of 5GB So how can you upload a 100 minute feature film and maintain quality? Or what would you recommend are the best settings to stay within that limit.
Steve Grisetti wrote on 9/1/2015, 10:59 AM
I think you'll have to compromise on one or the other. The limit is the limit.

You either need to lower your bitrate and reduce quality or break your video into 5 gig pieces.
Chienworks wrote on 9/1/2015, 6:14 PM
Commercial DVDs usually fit 100 minutes into about 5GB with excellent quality. Maybe you need to consider 480p instead of 1080p.
mark2929 wrote on 9/1/2015, 6:16 PM
Seems strange though that many professional films are encoded to about 2GB and look great
mark2929 wrote on 9/1/2015, 6:17 PM
Didn't see your post there Kelly Yes Maybe that could be a good way of doing it I'd still like to hear from someone who has done this professionally though,