![]() Additionally, I would enable '2-Pass encoding' and check 'disable preview.' 2-Pass encoding supposedly makes the video look better (but takes a little longer to encode) and disabling the preview will allow the video to encode faster. I've always used 512 x 384 so that the resizing would dilute some of those artifacts. You can view the small table as a guide for resolution sizes. However, if your footage is not 4:3, you may want to set your sizes accordingly. Now, it might be okay if you use fansubs that are much larger, like 720 x 480 (standard DV-NTSC format), or DVD-rips at their original resolution but if you use a fansub that's is or much lower than 640x480, it might not look good as you might be re-introducing some artifacts that were present in the original fansub. To me, I think 640 x 480 for a music video is a bit of an overkill. dv file into the black area where it says "no film." You can probably press that Green button right about now but I wouldn't just yet. ![]() If you don't see that drawer on the left side, click on the green arrow button on the bottom left of the window to view it. Once we have our DV file exported, it needs to be converted over. But if you insist in using QuickTime, scroll down pass the DV-to-DivX conversion process and we'll talk about QuickTime export. That, and most fansubs are usually compressed in one of those three formats. Of course, you can probably use QuickTime since it's used by the lots of viewers on the Internet, like Windows Media and Real Media (aka "The Big 3"), but for some reason or another, the Anime community seems to prefer DivX, XviD, or 3ivx. The export process took around 6 minutes on my computer. My movie, which is almost four minutes long (which includes the intro in the beginning of the movie) may be as large as 835 MB. From there, you should see a sheet that looks like this:Ĭlick on the QuickTime logo and in the "Compress movie for:" pulldown menu, choose Full Quality DV and then click the Share button. ![]() When you're done, you're ready to get it converted to DivX. Method 1: DV Export and Conversion to DivX I'll leave it up to you to figure out which codec is best for you. ![]() I'll provide three formats: DivX, XviD, and QuickTime Sorensen. In this page, you can pretty much export it in whatever format you want. Making AMV's with iMovie Making an AMV with iMovie ![]()
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