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Rather Large Files?

I am trying to generate a slide show for work and want to use the funky transitions etc available in iMovie.


I can generate the DVD just fine and every thing workd great but when I try and then burn to a DVD it keeps coming up with file size to large?


I can't understand why 300 medium res photos split with transitions makes my files sizes so big it wont fit on a DVD?


Is there anyway I can compress the finished file before saving to DVD and still getting it to play in a DVD player?


best regards.

iMovie '11, Mac OS X (10.7.2)

Posted on Jan 16, 2012 8:32 AM

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Question marked as Best reply

Posted on Jan 16, 2012 9:09 AM

iDVD has a 99 chapter (or as in this case, slide) limitation.


There are many ways to produce slide shows using iPhoto, iMovie or iDVD and some limit the number of photos you can use (iDVD has a 99 chapter (slide) limitation).


If what you want is what I want, namely to be able to use high resolution photos (even 300 dpi tiff files), to pan and zoom individual photos, use a variety of transitions, to add and edit music or commentary, place text exactly where you want it, and to end up with a DVD that looks good on both your Mac and a TV - in other words end up with and end result that does not look like an old fashioned slide show from a projector - you may be interested in how I do it. You don't have to do it my way, but the following may be food for thought!


Firstly you need proper software to assemble the photos, decide on the duration of each, the transitions you want to use, and how to pan and zoom individual photos where required, and add proper titles. For this I use Photo to Movie. You can read about what it can do on their website:


http://www.lqgraphics.com/software/phototomovie.php


(Other users here use the alternative FotoMagico: http://www.boinx.com/fotomagico/homevspro/ which you may prefer - I have no experience with it.)


Neither of these are freeware, but are worth the investment if you are going to do a lot of slide shows. Read about them in detail, then decide which one you feel is best suited to your needs.


Once you have timed and arranged and manipulated the photos to your liking in Photo to Movie, it exports the file to iMovie as a DV stream. You can add music in Photo to Movie, but I prefer doing this in iMovie where it is easier to edit. You can now further edit the slide show in iMovie just as you would a movie, including adding other video clips, then send it to iDVD 7, or Toast, for burning.


You will be pleasantly surprised at how professional the results can be!


To simply create a slide show in iDVD 7 onwards from images in iPhoto or stored in other places on your hard disk or a connected server, look here:


http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1089

4 replies
Question marked as Best reply

Jan 16, 2012 9:09 AM in response to Giles9602

iDVD has a 99 chapter (or as in this case, slide) limitation.


There are many ways to produce slide shows using iPhoto, iMovie or iDVD and some limit the number of photos you can use (iDVD has a 99 chapter (slide) limitation).


If what you want is what I want, namely to be able to use high resolution photos (even 300 dpi tiff files), to pan and zoom individual photos, use a variety of transitions, to add and edit music or commentary, place text exactly where you want it, and to end up with a DVD that looks good on both your Mac and a TV - in other words end up with and end result that does not look like an old fashioned slide show from a projector - you may be interested in how I do it. You don't have to do it my way, but the following may be food for thought!


Firstly you need proper software to assemble the photos, decide on the duration of each, the transitions you want to use, and how to pan and zoom individual photos where required, and add proper titles. For this I use Photo to Movie. You can read about what it can do on their website:


http://www.lqgraphics.com/software/phototomovie.php


(Other users here use the alternative FotoMagico: http://www.boinx.com/fotomagico/homevspro/ which you may prefer - I have no experience with it.)


Neither of these are freeware, but are worth the investment if you are going to do a lot of slide shows. Read about them in detail, then decide which one you feel is best suited to your needs.


Once you have timed and arranged and manipulated the photos to your liking in Photo to Movie, it exports the file to iMovie as a DV stream. You can add music in Photo to Movie, but I prefer doing this in iMovie where it is easier to edit. You can now further edit the slide show in iMovie just as you would a movie, including adding other video clips, then send it to iDVD 7, or Toast, for burning.


You will be pleasantly surprised at how professional the results can be!


To simply create a slide show in iDVD 7 onwards from images in iPhoto or stored in other places on your hard disk or a connected server, look here:


http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1089

Jan 18, 2012 9:44 AM in response to Giles9602

The slide show is not very long at all, at the moment it is about 200 (less than 30 mins) slides plus tranistions, I am not sure why it is so big? I import the files into iPhoto as an event, then then transfer them to iMovie, drop them in then adjust the slide length and relvant transitions, 'share' the project into iDVD, it does everything it is meant to but when I burn it to disc it wont work as the file sizes are about 7.5 GB (to big for a standard single layer 4.7 GB disc?).


What is going on? lol

Rather Large Files?

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