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Known Participant
April 14, 2020
Answered

Importing and rendering 2048x1536 jpgs from iphone XS without degradation - 2020/Windows

  • April 14, 2020
  • 3 replies
  • 782 views

I'm a newbie working mostly with stills from an epic trip.  I'd sure like to get the workflow right before investing a lot of time in my movie.

 

If I bring an image into Elements it recognizes it correctly and shows clearly in the (static) preview window, but whether I render it or not it looks substantially degraded when playing, either in a small window or full screen.  Exporting even to UHD format still shows substantially degraded images.   (The source images themselves show beautifully on my 2560x1440 display.)

 

Once I'm able to include images with minimum degradation the plan would be to rely on pan-and-zoom a fair bit, so resizing them in advance may not be practical.

 

What preset should I be using?  (Final output could be directly to an HD display or to Vimeo.)

What am I missing?

 

Thanks!

 

I'm attaching a sample image.  Even if I deliberately downsample the image to 1080 rows in height the left side of the brim of hat worn by the guy in the middle isn't obviously pixelated in the original and the large text on the bulletin board is clear.  All of the videos I've been able to make so far have visible stair-stepping on the brim of his visor and crummy text.  Even when viewed full-screen using VLC.  Please tell me I'm missing something!

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Correct answer Bill Sprague

"Any pitfalls to be wary of?"

I would probably pick 1080p30 instead of 29.97 but it probably won't matter.  Be sure and check the box to "Force the project settings."  Then before you do any work, check the project settins in the Edit menu to be sure you have 1080p.   Put a single image on the timeline and output a sample.  It should look very good!

3 replies

Bill SpragueCommunity ExpertCorrect answer
Community Expert
April 17, 2020

"Any pitfalls to be wary of?"

I would probably pick 1080p30 instead of 29.97 but it probably won't matter.  Be sure and check the box to "Force the project settings."  Then before you do any work, check the project settins in the Edit menu to be sure you have 1080p.   Put a single image on the timeline and output a sample.  It should look very good!

Legend
April 15, 2020

It doesn't matter how high the resolution of your original photo is. It's going to be reduced to video resolution once you add it to a video editor.

If you look under the program's Edit menu, what is listed on the General page of Project Settings? That's the resolution of your video.

 

You can improve the look of your photo somewhat by going to the program's Edit menu and selecting Preferences and, on the General page, unchecking Scale Still to Frame Size -- but you must do this BEFORE you import the photo into your project. Note that when you do this though the photo will come in at full resolution -- which may be larger than the video frame.

Known Participant
April 15, 2020

I know nothing about video production but a fair bit about the perils of resampling and recompressing images for mapmaking - these seem like familiar pain points.

 

 

Un-checking "scale still to frame size" does help a bit, but it is still surprising to see the degradation of image quality.  Any other tips?

 

As a separate matter, I do have some video from my iPhone XS.  I don't seem to be able to apply shake reduction because Elements doesn't seem to have an appropriate preset?

This happens with portrait or landscape video, even in a brand-new project where the clip is the only media present (so my understanding is that Elements should have chosen appropriate settings based on that clip.)   

 

Thanks for any help you can give!

Known Participant
April 16, 2020

You cannot change the project settings. Have to start over.

The preset list is a little hard to parse for those of us new to video.

If you are new to video start with a test project, watch some tutorials and read the manual.

That way you understand how it all works and dont loose a lot of work when encountering issues.

Then you start a real project.

 

Video editing looks simple but its not in these days of gopros, smartphones, still cameras with all different resolutions, framerates and a lot more....


Thanks.  That's exactly what I'm doing.

 

Am I wrong in thinking that Elements would configure project settings appropriately based on what it sees in the first image I choose?  I suspect this may be so, because new projects with exactly one image don't seem to have the correct settings for even that one image.

 

The vast bulk of my images are exactly like this:

I know my endpoint for Vimeo and for local display is intended to be 1080p.  What ought I to be choosing?  This appears to be the default:

This would appear to be the only 1080p preset available to me with similar timings and without multi-channel sound - is it more suitable?

 

Ann Bens
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 15, 2020

Post screenshot project settings and export settings.