Thanks in advance for any suggestions.
I have made a DVD for a high school sports banquet. I met with the technicians at the theater to test the DVD today and it looks very good, largely thanks to help I received here a couple of weeks ago. But ... they introduced an option that could potentially make it look even better and I'm hoping to get some help here.
I have 8 veg files that make up the 8 chapters on the DVD. The media includes still photos, still photos with motion, titles, and video from games. The total project is 38 minutes and I rendered all the veg files at 8 mbps to mpg, which I used in DVDA. The rendered files and the DVDA were created at 4:3. The DVD looks awesome on a 4:3 television and that was my intent, as the DVD will be given to the players as a gift. At the banquet, the presentation will be shown in a medium-sized theater at a widescreen aspect ratio. It still looked very good today, but ... the technicians told me I could play the DVD directly from my laptop if I want. So, for the actual banquet, I could really render the video however I want and play it on a software player from a laptop.
So ... what should I do? I've already devoted virtually every free moment the past month on this (I'm just a Dad of 2 players on the team) and I really can't spend much more time on this. It is perfectly acceptable as is ... but I can't help but want it to look even better at the banquet.
Is there something I can do with the veg files that are already set up and just re-render them differently? Should I change the properties of the veg files to widescreen and have black bars on the sides? Should I just choose a widescreen output and re-render the veg files? Should I go above 8 mbps?
The banquet is in two weeks, so I do have time to re-render. I don't have time to go through the hundreds (or thousands) of items in the media bins of each veg file and make changes to them.
Thanks very, very much for suggestions.
I have made a DVD for a high school sports banquet. I met with the technicians at the theater to test the DVD today and it looks very good, largely thanks to help I received here a couple of weeks ago. But ... they introduced an option that could potentially make it look even better and I'm hoping to get some help here.
I have 8 veg files that make up the 8 chapters on the DVD. The media includes still photos, still photos with motion, titles, and video from games. The total project is 38 minutes and I rendered all the veg files at 8 mbps to mpg, which I used in DVDA. The rendered files and the DVDA were created at 4:3. The DVD looks awesome on a 4:3 television and that was my intent, as the DVD will be given to the players as a gift. At the banquet, the presentation will be shown in a medium-sized theater at a widescreen aspect ratio. It still looked very good today, but ... the technicians told me I could play the DVD directly from my laptop if I want. So, for the actual banquet, I could really render the video however I want and play it on a software player from a laptop.
So ... what should I do? I've already devoted virtually every free moment the past month on this (I'm just a Dad of 2 players on the team) and I really can't spend much more time on this. It is perfectly acceptable as is ... but I can't help but want it to look even better at the banquet.
Is there something I can do with the veg files that are already set up and just re-render them differently? Should I change the properties of the veg files to widescreen and have black bars on the sides? Should I just choose a widescreen output and re-render the veg files? Should I go above 8 mbps?
The banquet is in two weeks, so I do have time to re-render. I don't have time to go through the hundreds (or thousands) of items in the media bins of each veg file and make changes to them.
Thanks very, very much for suggestions.