I was just looking ata new version of my last project. I shot it in 4:3 60i, and had just rendered a version that was 16:9 24P. Looking at it as objectively as possible I noticed the following advantages to having shot it 4:3 rather than 16:9: I
If I had shot it native 16:9, I wouldn't have had the room at the top and the bottom to use Deshaker which I did on the majority of the shots. While I would love the extra resolution of a 16:9 camera, I'm not at all sure that the extra resolution matters as much as looking at a stable image.
Also, as I was looking at how smooth it looked at 24P, I couldn't help but think that if I hadn't used Deshaker so much, that the 24P motion wouldn't have looked anywhere near as smooth. Again if I had shot it on a native 16:9 camera I wouldn't have been able to use Deshaker to the same extent, and the 24p conversion probably would have looked a lot more jerky.
One thing I love about 16:9 24p video is that to my eyes it looks better scaled down on a 4:3 television than interlaced 16:9 video does. Looking at this video on the TV in my bedroom, I was thinking that with every 4th line being thrown away anyway, that the extra resolution espesially didn't matter in this case. I hate the look of interlaced 16:9 footage shown on a 4:3 set and usually do separate 16:9 and 4:3 versions so that it looks ok in each format. With the 24p 16:9 render, I don't see anywhere near the damage from the 4:3 scaling and am happy with the single 16:9 24P video on both types of televisions. Looking at it on a 4:3 set, it seems like the end product was noticably better from having been shot 4:3 even though I was looking at it letterboxed.
I compressed the video down with MPEG 1 compression to a 640 x 352 size with just under 200kbps including audio. It looks better than any other video I have tried to shrink to this size. I was just thinking that if I had shot it with a 16:9 camera, the 16:9 aspect ratio would be such that the extra resolution would have been thrown away anyway, and once again, I would have not had the extra space to deshake the video, the shaky video wouldn't have looked as smooth at 24p, and with the shake it wouldn't have compressed nearly as well, especially with the older (but universally compatible) MPEG 1 codec.
The one place where I wished I had shot it 16:9 was when I took it to my friend's house to view on his beautiful new 50" widescreen. The image didn't look nearly as sharp, and I could see which shot's I had deshaken before I bought the Main Concepts DV Codec, and overall I could see that on the Deshaker shots the video was a less sharp. Actually, when I saw it there I wished I had shot it HD. That it was SD had never bothered me until then.
If I had shot it native 16:9, I wouldn't have had the room at the top and the bottom to use Deshaker which I did on the majority of the shots. While I would love the extra resolution of a 16:9 camera, I'm not at all sure that the extra resolution matters as much as looking at a stable image.
Also, as I was looking at how smooth it looked at 24P, I couldn't help but think that if I hadn't used Deshaker so much, that the 24P motion wouldn't have looked anywhere near as smooth. Again if I had shot it on a native 16:9 camera I wouldn't have been able to use Deshaker to the same extent, and the 24p conversion probably would have looked a lot more jerky.
One thing I love about 16:9 24p video is that to my eyes it looks better scaled down on a 4:3 television than interlaced 16:9 video does. Looking at this video on the TV in my bedroom, I was thinking that with every 4th line being thrown away anyway, that the extra resolution espesially didn't matter in this case. I hate the look of interlaced 16:9 footage shown on a 4:3 set and usually do separate 16:9 and 4:3 versions so that it looks ok in each format. With the 24p 16:9 render, I don't see anywhere near the damage from the 4:3 scaling and am happy with the single 16:9 24P video on both types of televisions. Looking at it on a 4:3 set, it seems like the end product was noticably better from having been shot 4:3 even though I was looking at it letterboxed.
I compressed the video down with MPEG 1 compression to a 640 x 352 size with just under 200kbps including audio. It looks better than any other video I have tried to shrink to this size. I was just thinking that if I had shot it with a 16:9 camera, the 16:9 aspect ratio would be such that the extra resolution would have been thrown away anyway, and once again, I would have not had the extra space to deshake the video, the shaky video wouldn't have looked as smooth at 24p, and with the shake it wouldn't have compressed nearly as well, especially with the older (but universally compatible) MPEG 1 codec.
The one place where I wished I had shot it 16:9 was when I took it to my friend's house to view on his beautiful new 50" widescreen. The image didn't look nearly as sharp, and I could see which shot's I had deshaken before I bought the Main Concepts DV Codec, and overall I could see that on the Deshaker shots the video was a less sharp. Actually, when I saw it there I wished I had shot it HD. That it was SD had never bothered me until then.