hi edouard,

could you give some more details how the
"fast conversion in quicktime" of the single
frames works?

thanks

jan

Edouard Chalaron wrote:
> For those interested in movies (opposed to video) under Cinelerra
> For about 18 months I have been back to super 8 mm.
> Cinelerra has proved extremely good for this purpose. I do transfer the
> frames one at a time with a 422 8 bits industrial camera.
> I am getting my frames in 1400x1200 pixels progressive frame in 422 YUV
> 8 bits colorspace. 
> A fast conversion in quicktime allows me to import the lot and then it
> is a matter of gamma and color correction. 
> Hard drives are then becoming consumables (50 to 60 GB for 20 minutes),
> but details and colors are from another world.
> 
> If you want some examples, you can watch (self promotion, sorry) some on
> you tube, my nickname is Dr Doud.
> Mostly off road motorbikes, some shots in the 60s here in NZ, others
> shot 6 months ago here in NZ as well.
> 
> Enjoy
> Edouard
> 
> 
> On Sun, 2007-07-01 at 19:47 +0200, Stefan de Konink wrote:
> 
> Hi Rob,
> 
> rob switzer schreef:
>>>> I posted about it here to show that yes, real work of value *can* be
>>>> done with Cinelerra.
> I think that never has been the question. Cinelerra was as stable as
> Adobe InDesign 1. Literally, as long as you can find the save button it
> is a great project, and one of the two I work with to do animation and
> some cutting. (Blender is currently the other one)
> 
> 
>>>> I'd also love to see some restoration work you've done with Cinelerra,
>>>> Stefan ... or *any* work, for that matter ... perhaps you'll provide a
>>>> link to some examples of your work ... and, as Gordon pointed out,
>>>> Caligari *is* in the public domain ... perhaps you should organize a
>>>> single-frame restoration project using Cinelerra.
> As I pointed out, Cinelerra isn't the tool for a singleframe
> *digitizing* job. For such instance a batch system running at 0.3 frames
> a second could generate the data that is required, so an estimate that
> this job alone costs 92 hours and results in 1TB of data it could be
> very nice 'just' render these images in a DV movie to edit it with an
> absolute timebase in Cinelerra and render the definite movie after it
> based on the source material.
> 
> 
> http://uva.hobby-site.com/~skinkie/audiosync-transition.wmv this is the
> first 60 seconds (excluding the serperate audio) of my first serious
> attempt to edit consumer miniDV. Just showing what you can do with
> transitions and audiosync for videosync. Nothing to be proud of :)
> 
> 
> I just rendered this part, but I think it was made like two years ago,
> and if you only look at the usability of Cinelerra CV between then and
> now it is a *big* difference. Maybe it was my 'dew-opp' to be too slow
> then, or my amd64-x2 now being fast enough, I still love to use this
> program. (Ok, for somethings I cheat with ffmpeg ;)
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Stefan
> 
>>
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