4/3 and 16/9 Pal
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- monospaced0
those are ratios
- Hombre_Lobo0
wha? you crazy fool.
are u meaning what are High definition pixel dimensions?
4/3 and 16/9 are just ratios.
can be 4 x 3 pixels, or 4000x3000 pixels. still 4/3!
- monospaced0
Either 720p or 1080p for 16/9, I'd guess.
- I think 4/3 PAL is 640x480monospaced
- NTSC is 640 x 480grafisk
- rightmonospaced
- inteliboy0
720x576
- grafisk0
Really, you couldn't find this on google?
- inteliboy0
in in pshop, work in
768 x 576
then shrink down to 720x576
- inteliboy0
Though this is pretty old school. Just aim for standard 720p or 1080p sizes, then at the end of the project resize to NTSC/PAL to your hearts content.
- ephix0
if using photoshop, just choose from the film size presets when making a new doc.
- tangoxray30
4:3 = 720x576
6:9 = 1280x720 or 1920x1080Prob best to avoid 1440x1080, this is used with HDV formats.
Progressive or interlaced is irrelevant.
- georgesIII0
I did a 720x576 film and it gives me a 5/4 ratio
how can I convert it to 4/3 and 16/9
Thanks
- inteliboy0
Rectangle vs square pixel math really.
720x576 will be 4:3 on a 4:3 tv screen. To convert to 16:9 you can either add black bars, or stretch it and make it anamorphic -- either way you'll be cropping your frame.
Unless you have this footage, and it is all squished - that means it is already in 16:9, but anamorphic, so will stretch back out when played on TV. SOrry if not making sense, is late here.
- tangoxray30
Check your pixel shape
http://docs.info.apple.com/artic…Then use 720 x 576 for a 4:3 version
and 1024 x 576 for a 16:9 version