I have already searched the forums to gather what info I could regarding poor
still image quality.
I am creating a moving stills movie at 320x240. Project Properties are:
Field order: None (Prog. Scan).
Pixel aspect ratio: 1.00.
Full Res. rendering quality: Best.
I'm uncertain what I'm doing (or neglecting to do) to get such poor quality.
I originally started with a 640x480 jpeg to allow for panning & zooming.
After reading some of the post regarding image quality I took the original jpeg uncropped at 2048x1546 and saved as a PNG file. The results still look horrible. Preview is set on Best.
When I bring the low quality jpeg 640x480 at 72 ppi into After Effects it looks as I would expect it to. At 100% the 640x480 image looks plenty sharp and has plenty of surface area in the 320x240 project window to allow for pans and zooms.
Is there any info that I have left out that would help someone in troubleshooting this problem? Hope someone can shed some light on this as I would rather create this in Vegas and not AE.
Thanks in advance.
still image quality.
I am creating a moving stills movie at 320x240. Project Properties are:
Field order: None (Prog. Scan).
Pixel aspect ratio: 1.00.
Full Res. rendering quality: Best.
I'm uncertain what I'm doing (or neglecting to do) to get such poor quality.
I originally started with a 640x480 jpeg to allow for panning & zooming.
After reading some of the post regarding image quality I took the original jpeg uncropped at 2048x1546 and saved as a PNG file. The results still look horrible. Preview is set on Best.
When I bring the low quality jpeg 640x480 at 72 ppi into After Effects it looks as I would expect it to. At 100% the 640x480 image looks plenty sharp and has plenty of surface area in the 320x240 project window to allow for pans and zooms.
Is there any info that I have left out that would help someone in troubleshooting this problem? Hope someone can shed some light on this as I would rather create this in Vegas and not AE.
Thanks in advance.