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Inspiring
February 20, 2020
Respondido

Football Players Stretched Out Vertically

  • February 20, 2020
  • 6 respostas
  • 1288 Visualizações

I have some old football videos.  The players appear streatched out vertically.  Is there a way to fix this?    File Path: C:\Users\Mike Stehly\Videos\Mikey Football\Mikey Sports Final\Video 1g.VOB
Type: MPEG Movie
File Size: 1023.97 MB
Image Size: 720 x 480
Frame Rate: 29.97
Source Audio Format: 48000 Hz - compressed - Stereo
Project Audio Format: 48000 Hz - 32 bit floating point - Stereo
Total Duration: 00:14:22:25
Pixel Aspect Ratio: 0.9091
Alpha: None
Video Codec Type: MPEG 4:2:0

 

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Melhor resposta por Adam 7Seven

Within the Effect controls window go to 'scale'. then unclick 'uniform scale' you can then play around with the vertical scale until it looks correct. Good luck, Adam

6 Respostas

Warren Heaton
Community Expert
Community Expert
February 20, 2020

DVD-Video is always 720x480, but there's a flag in the VIDEO_TS data structure that tells the picture to display as Full Frame, Letterbox, Widescreen or Pan & Scan while the DVD-Video is playing in a set-top player.

 

If you import 720x480 wide source from a VIDEO_TS folder, Premiere will just see it as 720x480 Full Frame.

 

To interpret the footage as Widescreen, change the Pixel Aspect Ratio to Custom D1/DV NTSC Widescreen 16:9 (1.2121) under Clip > Modify > Interpret Footage... > Pixel Aspect Ratio > Custom.

 

You can do this with one clip or with multiple clips selected.

 

Ann Bens
Community Expert
Community Expert
February 20, 2020

I dont think it is wide screen as PAR was 0.9091

 

Would you do me a favour and post the screenshots.

Warren Heaton
Community Expert
Community Expert
February 20, 2020

It's PAR 0.9091 because Michael is importing the VOB.  The information that would tell a device (or Premiere Pro) to stretch it horizontally to appear proportinally correct is not there.  As such, it will appear stretched vertically (or squeezed).

 

In order for Premiere Pro to correctly interpret it at PAR 1.2121, the 720x480 source footage would need to be DV-NTSC shot in widescreen mode.

 

Screenshots always help.

Inspiring
February 20, 2020

This is a video of my grandsons football game in 2013.  I do not know what type of camera was used.  The team hired a company to film and edit the video.  The original does not appear to be HD.  The original video was not letterboxed.

Inspiring
February 20, 2020

Thank you Adam_7Seven.  Your suggestion corrected the problem.

Ann Bens
Community Expert
Community Expert
February 20, 2020

That is the easy way out. Why did it stretch i like to know.

 

Ann Bens
Community Expert
Community Expert
February 20, 2020

Guessing Pr does not recognizes the aspect ratio.

Post screenshot sequence settings and timeline with source and program monitor showing.

And screenshot of same image in vlc player.

 

Ann Bens
Community Expert
Community Expert
February 20, 2020

Or its letterboxed.

Stan Jones
Community Expert
Community Expert
February 20, 2020

Does Mediainfo confirm the data? The size is right, so perhaps it was created wrong?

 

It's snowing here, and I first wanted to just tease you. Things like:

Old? They look pretty young to me!

Stretched? I think they may just be skinny. 

 

Then I couldn't really tell if the helmets looked stretched. Oh, boy.

 

Stan

Adam 7Seven
Adam 7SevenResposta
Participant
February 20, 2020

Within the Effect controls window go to 'scale'. then unclick 'uniform scale' you can then play around with the vertical scale until it looks correct. Good luck, Adam