Try applying a slight gaussian blur to the photo where motion is 
applied, either horizontal or vertical (I cant remember which works 
best) and see if that helps. Yes I would say this this is normal with 
very high quality high contrast photos.

Barry


--- In [email protected], "Jean Chang" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>
> Hi Robin,
> 
> I finally had a chance to try your suggestion.  Rotating the slide 
did not have any effect on the sparkle effect.  It seems to happen 
most in high-contrast, detailed areas.  For example, one photo was of 
a man speaking at a podium, and there was a floral wreath on the 
front of the podium.  The wreath was all glittery, with that sparkle 
effect.  If I did not zoom, it didn't do it.  It only happens when I 
apply any motion to the photo.
> 
> Unfortunately, I don't have After Effects.  I ended up doing the 
bulk of the whole show in Photodex Producer.  Actually, for this type 
of show, it's way easier to work with than Premiere, and you can have 
a show finished in about a tenth of the time.
> 
> Thanks for your info,
> 
> Jean
> 
>   ----- Original Message ----- 
>   From: robinleeedwards 
>   To: [email protected] 
>   Sent: Sunday, August 19, 2007 10:19 AM
>   Subject: [AP] Re: artifacts in stills
> 
> 
> 
>   Hi Jean:
> 
>   I'm going to guess that this "sparkle" comes off worst when you 
have
>   repeating lines (buildings, blinds, picket fences). If so, 
consider
>   rotating the photo about 5 degrees to see if if still happens. 
That
>   isn't a permanent fix but will uncover the underlying problem. 
> 
>   Hope this points you in the right direction, also maybe experiment
>   with another Adobe product to zoom your photos (After-Effects).
> 
>   More later,
> 
>   Robin Edwards
> 
>   --- In [email protected], "Jean Chang" <jachang@> 
wrote:
>   >
>   > I have been working on a slideshow, using all stills, and on 
certain
>   ones, I'm seeing what looks almost like a "sparkly" effect. It is
>   most pronounced if I zoom or pan. The photos are taken with my 
Nikon
>   D70, and are 3008 x 2000 pixels. If I reduce the size of the 
photos
>   down to a smaller resolution, it helps reduce the sparkly effect, 
but
>   then I'm not left with much to be able to zoom or pan. Is this
>   normal, or am I doing something wrong? If I open the full res 
photos
>   in Proshow Producer and make a slideshow there, that sparkly 
effect
>   does not happen, and the photos look great. It's only in Premiere 
Pro
>   1.5 that I have the problem.
>   > 
>   > Thanks.
>   > 
>   > Jean
>   > 
>   > 
>   > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>   >
> 
> 
> 
>    
> 
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>




 
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