DPI is totally irrelevant because it applies for print on paper only.
The only thing that is important is pixel width and height and if you
size them to 1920 x 1080 you'll be fine. For viewing on TV I would
higher blacks to 5% and lower highs to 90% because TV screens deal
with strong contrast images diffently than computer screens. In other
words, contrast of digital stills can be too big for TV screens.
Rieni
At 1-8-2012 16:41, you wrote:
>
>
>Hello All
>
>I am editing a nature video that incorporates both video and still
>photos. It is an HD project in 1920x1080P and am using CS5 to edit.
>
>I have never mixed video and still images in the same project and am
>not sure what size to make the stills. I presume I would resize and
>crop them to 1920x1080, but not sure what DPI setting to use. I know
>if they were to be viewed on a computer monitor I would use 72DPI,
>but what should be used for viewing on a large screen TV?
>
>I will be burning this project to Blu Ray.
>
>Any advice you can offer will be helpful and appreciated
>
>Thanks
>
>John A
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