Hi Nate,
re: slow motion... are you rendering the timeline after performing your slow
motion? Premiere Pro (if that's what you are using) attempts to give you a
real-time preview of your slow motion effect. However, to achieve this, it
has to compromise the quality or the smoothness. In this case, it
compromises the picture quality during the low-resolution preview. At least,
that's my hunch. If the clip is still blurry, you can play with some of the
field settings to see the different looks you can achieve with slow motion.
(They're found in the clip menu when you've got a clip selected.)
re: static. It's probably digital distortion (clipping) that sounds like
static. Usually it means your audio levels are too high. For example, audio
1 by itself isn't too loud, and audio 2 by itself isn't too loud. But
together, they're much too loud. To fix this, you can lower the volume of
each track, or lower the output volume of the master track, or even assign
the tracks to a submix track and lower its volume. So many choices. These
are found in the Audio Mixer, if you're using Premiere Pro.
-jeff
----- Original Message -----
When I slow a clip speed down, the image is really blurry & distorted
what options should I select to resolve this?
Also, another problem I am having is with audio. After rendering my
movie(DV AVI)...the audio is scratchy when an audio 1 & audio 2 channel
exist. In other words, when I select a song to play with the original
audio from the camera, after rendering the movie into DV AVI there is
audio static. What is going on here?
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