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Correct answer Ann Bens

No wonder you have bars.

You are exporting HD widescreen to SD 4:3.

Any reason to choose avi. Might want to have a look at H.264.

 

3 replies

Ann Bens
Community Expert
Ann BensCommunity ExpertCorrect answer
Community Expert
November 24, 2019

No wonder you have bars.

You are exporting HD widescreen to SD 4:3.

Any reason to choose avi. Might want to have a look at H.264.

 

Participant
November 24, 2019

It auto set as AVI, to fix it i change that to H.26?

Ann Bens
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 24, 2019

Post screenshot export settings with left tab to output with a visible image.

(please make your screenshots larger as they are unreadable)

 

Participant
November 24, 2019

Like this?

John T Smith
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 24, 2019

That most likely means that your sequence setting is not the same as your video

 

What is your video size (such as 1920x1080) and what is your sequence?

 

Premiere Pro use "Scale to Fill" on export. This will help to reduce the black bars
- Warning! this MAY make your video look "odd" since you are "stretching" things

Participant
November 24, 2019

The videos size is 1920x1080. Ill leave an image of sequence settings below. By scale to fill do you mean in Output of export settings? When I do that it takes away the top bars but removes a portion of the sides.