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So how do you make a GOOD DVD in Encore?

New Here ,
Jul 04, 2016 Jul 04, 2016

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     So I know how to make a grainy low res VHS quality DVD in Encore. You basically use any setting you want at whatever "Codec" or "resolution" or "quality" or "bitrate" or "UMPQ" and have it exported form Premier then import it into Encore (which by the way doesn't come with Premiere even though it is a base level program that one would need to export anything to DVD. That in an of itself is simply amazing ((it's hidden within an old version of CS6 inside the Creative cloud. You'll probably need a few u-tube tutorials to find it. ))). THEN you take your 4.6 GB exported video and watch Encore retranscode it to something around 2.7GB. You can mess with every setting and for the experts, "Advanced Settings" and watch as the quality of the transcode goes form poop to mud while the render time goes form one hour to 11 hours. Then have it burn the worthless fart it created onto a DVD, plug it into any DVD player, sit back and enjoy the 240i looking footage on you 30" monitor.

So I've become a pro at making DVDs that look like that over the past few days. So I ask you all how do you make a DVD with Encore that looks Good?

A few things I don't want to hear

"DVDs are SD so they will always look bad" I've edited footage on much less prestigious programs before and it looks, sharp, clear, grainless and professional, Don't tell me it can't be done.

"Your stock footage is probably bad" No it's 4K

"It's a Premiere Pro export problem" Nope the file Pr puts out is flawless. It's Encore.

Now some useful information for you guys. Here all all of the screen shots for all the Project Settings and export settings in Premier that have led to the best quality for a NTSC export so far.

Pr 1.PNGPr2.PNGproject settings.PNG

And here are the best settings I have tried in Encore that has yield the best of the worst footage I have made so far.encore settings.PNG

To be even more descriptive the video Encore puts onto a DVD is supper Grainy, especial around the edges of contrast areas and during any photo. There are dark chunky lines around borders, and the footage looks like it's lost about 80% of it's dynamic range especial when displaying black sections of video. Let me know what I am doing wrong.

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Community Expert ,
Jul 04, 2016 Jul 04, 2016

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Export from PPro using the MPEG2-DVD preset and import the 2 files (audio and video) in Encore for authoring... exporting to ANY other codec means that Encore has to RE-code to make the file legal for a DVD... you show that you are doing that, so you should produce a DVD that is "almost" as good as one you buy in a store

You may experiment with the export settings, as long as you don't go over what is legal for a DVD... if what you imported into Encore shows as "do not transcode" you are legal for a DVD

Link to DVD Demystified FAQ http://forums.adobe.com/thread/544206

CS5-thru-CC PPro/Encore tutorial list http://forums.adobe.com/thread/1448923 has lots of tutorial links to help learn Encore

CS6 is the final Encore, see #8 here for why http://forums.adobe.com/thread/1337952?tstart=0

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New Here ,
Jul 04, 2016 Jul 04, 2016

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Thank you for the quick reply John. I looked at all of your links and I'm afraid to say that following their advice has made things much worse. Here is what I am looking at guys.

Here is the MPEG-2 export from Premier with my settings.

premier export.PNG

Fairly good right? I would be happy with that if I could get it on a DVD.

Here is the fart that Encore turns it into with my settings.

DVD look.PNG

Ok? What happened? This is unusable. The fact that I pay money for this is literally insulting.

And here is the export from Premier with the exact settings of "Dave" from the video link you sent me.

PR export with stock Mpeg2-DVD settings.PNG

No. I'm not even going to waste a DVD on this to find out if Encore with magically turn this into a piece of usable work.

I thank you for responding John. I need your help in putting the pieces together though.

From the links you sent me, and I read/watched all of them, it looks like there is no actual way Adobe lets one publish usable work onto a DVD.

CORRECT ME IF I AM WRONG!

Back in the 2000s Adobe farmed out the program they needed to turn edited videos into DVDs.

A third party company came back with Encore.

Encore then became the single solitary way for any user to take their work and encode it onto DVD natively within Adobes programs.

The third party that made the program pulled their support for it in 2012 because they thought everyone would be "steaming" by now.

Adobe said "Yep seems legit" and kept the last version of Encore that came out in 2012 with NO INTENTIONS ON UPGRADING IT!?

And now Adobe still refuses to dedicated the R&D into making their own encoder.

Did I get that right? I don't want to make false allegations here.

Because IF I'm right there is literally no reason to use any programs made by Adobe to do any serious editing work if the final project needs to be made on a DVD.

AVID would be better right? Because at least they take their video editing seriously right. Am I wrong? Someone tell me I'm wrong because If I'm right this is literally too stupid to be true.

To hammer my point home about how generic encoding programs are better at making a DVD then Encore here is a still from the same GOOD Premier export that was then encoded and burnt onto a DVD using Windows DVD Maker.

windows sitll.PNG

AND IT COMES FREE WITH WINDOWS 7 AS IF IT WAS JUNK WARE!

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New Here ,
Sep 17, 2019 Sep 17, 2019

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these links go to the same place and have nothing to do with Encore! There is NO link to Encore on the page, they have destroyed it all.

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Community Expert ,
Jul 04, 2016 Jul 04, 2016

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"It's a Premiere Pro export problem" Nope the file Pr puts out is flawless. It's Encore.

No its not Encore: if you are watching Encore encode again you using the wrong setting in Premiere

Encoding 4000x3000 to mpg 1450x1088 (weird setting) is not the way to go.

Second encoding: mpg 1440x1088 1.0 encoding to 720x480 4:3 is not the way to go

If your stock footage is 4K then all should be with a 4K sequence in 16:9 in Premiere. Export to mpeg2-dvd in 16:9.

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New Here ,
Jul 04, 2016 Jul 04, 2016

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Roger that exporting mpeg2-dvd in 16:9...

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New Here ,
Jul 04, 2016 Jul 04, 2016

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Ok here are the export settings from Encoder (original set in Premier)

Media encoder settings for 16

And here is a still from that export before it even gets to Encore.

Pr export 16

Again not going to wast a DVD on this export.

Keep the ideas coming. I'll keep trying them until I get something that works.

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Community Expert ,
Jul 04, 2016 Jul 04, 2016

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Have you tried VBR2 or CBR?

Post a screenshot of your sequence settings

and a clip in Mediainfo in treeview.

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New Here ,
Jul 04, 2016 Jul 04, 2016

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Roger that exporting mpeg2-dvd in 16:9 with VBR2

and then CBR. Screen shots shortly.

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New Here ,
Jul 04, 2016 Jul 04, 2016

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Here are the settings for the export at mpeg2-dvd in 16:9 with VBR2.

mpeg2-16

and here are the settings with the export at mpeg2-dvd with CBR.

mpeg2-dvd 16

They are both queued up right now and it will take about an hour or so to handle them both.

I don't know what tree metadata you want, perhaps you can give me an example.

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Community Expert ,
Jul 04, 2016 Jul 04, 2016

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Your sequence settings are odd 4000x3000 that is not 4K.

Download MediaInfo

Open a file in treeview and post it on the forum

Also post a screenshot of your sequence settings

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New Here ,
Jul 04, 2016 Jul 04, 2016

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Don't have the data yet but here are the CBR and VBR2 passes at Mpeg2-DVD 16:9

CBR

crap cbr pass.PNG

junk

VBR2

crap VBR2 pass.PNG

junk

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New Here ,
Jul 04, 2016 Jul 04, 2016

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Sequence settings

sequence settings.PNG

Tree info on the imported stock clips that make the bulk of the video.

Stock footage info.PNG

stock footage other.PNG

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Community Expert ,
Jul 05, 2016 Jul 05, 2016

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As said before: your sequence settings are not correct. Incorrect resolution, field order and framerate.

Do one or the other to get matching settings:

new item icon.png

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LEGEND ,
Jul 05, 2016 Jul 05, 2016

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Listen to Ann please, she is "the Experts' Expert" in these parts 😉

4K video (Ultra HD or UHD) has a resolution of 3840x2160, as shot with current camcorders offering 4K. According to your MediaInfo data, your footage is NOT 4K, but rather is 1080p24 (1920x1080, 23.976 frames, Progressive).

So that's issue #1, the source footage is apparently not what you think it is.

Issue #2 is that the Sequence that you're editing in is set to 4000x3000 - how did you come up with that number?? That is not 4K, and it's not 16:9 widescreen, it's 4:3. 4000x3000 does not match up with any video format. It's a made-up number.

Issue #3 is that the DVD export settings are not quite matching the source, meaning you should be trying to make a Progressive widescreen at 23.976 fps, not 29.97.

Issue #4 is that Encore has NOTHING to do with the quality anyway - if you export a proper "DVD-legal" MPEG-2 file from Premiere/Media Encoder, then Encore will use that .m2v source "as is" and not do anything to it - no transcoding - thus Encore would not be affecting the video quality in any way, shape or form.

A word of friendly advice - if you want free help from nice people that are willing to help you and are not getting paid for it, please just ask the question and don't be adversarial about it. You catch more flies with honey than vinegar.

Meaning, "I have 4K video that I'm trying to burn to DVD with Encore and am getting poor results, how can I change my workflow to improve the quality?". That's how it works 😉

I look forward to helping you resolve your issues if I can.

Thank you

Jeff

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Contributor ,
Aug 06, 2018 Aug 06, 2018

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SAFEHARBOR11  wrote

Issue #4 is that Encore has NOTHING to do with the quality anyway - if you export a proper "DVD-legal" MPEG-2 file from Premiere/Media Encoder, then Encore will use that .m2v source "as is" and not do anything to it - no transcoding - thus Encore would not be affecting the video quality in any way, shape or form.

Jumping in late here to emphasize a point: as indicated above, you do NOT want Encore to transcode the footage (because it does a terrible job), but you may have to double-check settings to make sure it does not. Jeff suggests it happens automatically but, in my experience, that's not always the case.

After you import your "DVD-legal" MPEG-2 file*, right-click DVD Transcode in Project window, select Locate Transcoded File, then select the original m2v file.

As for what exactly qualifies as "DVD-legal", the easiest way is to choose one of the presets in Premiere. If you want to tweak those settings, check the links above to confirm you remain within accepted parameters.

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Community Expert ,
Aug 07, 2018 Aug 07, 2018

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My Canon still/video camera records 1280x720 30 frames per second... which is the setting I use to edit in PPro

I export widescreen 720x480 to make a DVD (I don't have a Blu-Ray writer)

What I create is not "quite" as good as a commercial DVD, but it is still better than a VHS tape

So, for my family movies, I'm happy with the result

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New Here ,
Jun 07, 2017 Jun 07, 2017

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Hi Chris,

any luck resolving bad quality DVD issue from Encore? Or, finding a workaround? I've been hating this problem for years.

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Contributor ,
Sep 09, 2017 Sep 09, 2017

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OK, it's now Sept 9, 2017.  After all the talk for the last  year, it would be nice for someone to reply to the last question, that "dimailer" asked on June 7, 2017.  "Any luck resolving ....?" 

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Community Expert ,
Sep 10, 2017 Sep 10, 2017

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Many users have gotten acceptable quality DVDs. The devil is in the details. This thread is not a good example of the difficult problems users struggle with because there were unnecessary problems (sequence mismatch etc).

Generally, post a new thread with your specific issues for help. Or find a better thread example if you want to point to recurring issues that you believe have not been solved.

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Community Expert ,
Sep 10, 2017 Sep 10, 2017

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We have got good dvd in the past. But since HD, UHD, 4K has come into the picture many find that Encore (or Premiere) is giving bad DVDs but in fact it is not giving bad dvds. People are now used to seeing HD quality and DVD is what it is: Standard Quality.

If you want to watch a home made (not Hollywood) dvd use real DVD software on the computer or a standalone BD player with upscaler for on the HD tv.

If you still dont like it dont bother and switch to BluRay.

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Community Expert ,
Sep 18, 2019 Sep 18, 2019

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LATEST

Nested threads in the new forum are making it hard to follow a discussion. So I am posting this to the original post.

 

Nested under chrisp58976499 on 7/4/16 is this p9ost 9/17/19 by donkjohnson:

 

"these links go to the same place and have nothing to do with Encore! There is NO link to Encore on the page, they have destroyed it all."

 

It is referring to the links in John Smith's post 7/4/16. When I got to it this morning, the first link, an Encore FAQ, is not found, and I assume was not moved to the new forum. I hope they fix it. 

 

The other 2 links are now working.

 

Do let us know when you find bad links. We believe that they can be made active if the old post is useful.

 

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