Perhaps use the free MPEG Streamclip to make an SD version, then burn normally.

I've also had decent, if not stellar, results using iDVD and just sweeping my 
HD file onto the disc map.

Rick


Rick Prelinger

Associate Professor, Film & Digital Media
UC Santa Cruz

Prelinger Library & Archives
San Francisco, California, USA
foot...@panix.com


> On Jul 27, 2014, at 13:20, "Beebe, Roger W." <beebe...@osu.edu> wrote:
> 
> All,
> 
> Since in recent days we’ve been discussing codecs & other topics that’re, 
> stricto sensu, not film-related, I hoped I might start a similar thread 
> that’s probably relevant to most of us still making work on celluloid.  I’ve 
> been submitting work to festivals after a long break, and while most of the 
> festivals now allow online submissions (which, as long as they don’t go 
> through Withoutabox, is a pretty great time saver), but a few festivals still 
> require DVD screeners.  I tried to make a DVD of my HD video (using Encore, 
> since my new laptop no longer has DVD Studio Pro, which I’d used in the 
> past), and the results were so bad that I’m reluctant to send it out.  Does 
> anyone have advice about how best to massage HD content into a 
> not-entirely-terrible shape for burning to DVD?  Am I inherently going to end 
> up with worse-than-YouTube video?  I really feel like it’d be a waste of an 
> entry fee to send along what I produced on the first round, so I’m hoping 
> there’s some solution out there that’ll produce much better results.
> 
> ?
> R.
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