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atcold
Known Participant
April 5, 2021
Answered

Exporting to resolution higher than sequence

  • April 5, 2021
  • 6 replies
  • 7235 views

Say, my sequence size is 1280 × 720, having a scaled down 1920 × 1080 video in it.

I wonder if exporting the sequence in 1920 × 1080 will cause any loss of resolution. Meaning, does Premiere skip the 1920 × 1080 → 1280 × 720 step, and use the original higher resolution for the final encoding?

Correct answer Peru Bob

You will lose resolution.

6 replies

Jeff Bugbee
Adobe Expert
May 27, 2021

If you place a 1920x1080 video in a 720 sequence, Premiere assumes you WANT the video scaled down. In this case Premiere does not think "hmm, maybe this user doesn't want the video scaled, I'll just skip that instruction and go ahead and use the higher resolution."

 

It does what it's told, and in this case, you told it to scale down a 1080 video to 720, then export the 720 video at 1080, resulting in a lossy scale up.

Brainiac
May 10, 2021

Yes, you will lose image quality out of the 1920x1080 source. If you are using a 1280 x 720 sequence, and your final export will be 1920 x 1080, then all NLEs, not just Premiere Pro, will convert 1920 x 1080 to 1280 x 720, and then back up to 1920 x 1080. There is simply no way at all whatsoever to circumvent that.

 

The only way to minimize this image quality loss will be to simply use a 1920 x 1080 timeline, and then upscale the 1280 x 720 footage. That way, you will avoid the image-degrading double-conversion. The key is to use a timeline resolution that is exactly the same as your final export resolution when dealing with mixed-resolution footage.

atcold
atcoldAuthor
Known Participant
May 27, 2021

Okay, thank you.

Averdahl
Adobe Expert
May 7, 2021
quote

Say, my sequence size is 1280 × 720, having a scaled down 1920 × 1080 video in it.

I wonder if exporting the sequence in 1920 × 1080 will cause any loss of resolution. Meaning, does Premiere skip the 1920 × 1080 → 1280 × 720 step, and use the original higher resolution for the final encoding?


By @atcold

 

If you have a 1280x720 sequence and put 1920x1080 video on it and scale it down so it fits the 1280x720 sequence the following will happen upon export to 1920x1080: Premiere Pro will scale down the 1920x1080 footage to 1280x720 and then up-scale from 1280x720 to your selected output, iow 1920x1080. Premiere Pro will not skip the 1920x1080 > 1280x720 step.

 

So yes, Premiere pro will scale down the footage and then upscale it and you will loose quality, as have already been pointed out in this thread several times. 

 

That´s how the render pipeline works in Premiere Pro in your example: 1920x1080 > 1280x720 > 1920x1080

 

All scaling is destructive in every video application available on the market. The good news is that many times one will get away with it since the scaling algorithms have been improved over the years and since non-video people tend to look at the content itself rather than the technical quality.

atcold
atcoldAuthor
Known Participant
May 7, 2021
quote

Premiere Pro will not skip the 1920x1080 > 1280x720 step.


By @Averdahl

 

Is there a way to verify this?

Inspiring
May 8, 2021

atcold,

You can always do some testing of your own.

Inspiring
May 7, 2021

Why are you placing 1920 X 1080 video into a 1280 X 720 sequence if you plan to output at 1920 X 1080?

atcold
atcoldAuthor
Known Participant
May 7, 2021

Good question.

 

My footage is 1280 × 720.

Therefore, I did initially create a sequence with this resolution.

When my footage is covering the entire screen the effective resolution is 1280 × 720.

 

I use to switch to a different layout, most of the time, where my camera feed is scaled to 50%.

Now, exporting the sequence at 1280 × 720 would lead to a reduction of resolution (Premiere is applying an aliasing low-pass filter and perform subsampling of the footage).

 

Now, when encoding videos, we apply the final transformation as a combination of intermediate transformations, and not each of them separately. For sake of explanation, let's think of appying a rotation of 30° 3 times. The overall roation would be of 90°, which is a non-destructice transformation. The same is not true if talking about any rotation which is not a multiple of 90°.

 

So, here I was asking a confirmation about normal computer vision practices, which would imply not losing resolution when a footage undergoes two subsequent scalings.

Peru Bob
Peru BobCorrect answer
Adobe Expert
April 13, 2021

You will lose resolution.

atcold
atcoldAuthor
Known Participant
April 15, 2021

Any reference to the documentation confirming this?

Ann Bens
Adobe Expert
April 15, 2021

Nope. Just common sense.

atcold
atcoldAuthor
Known Participant
April 13, 2021

Anyone?