Deinterlace magic?

Hello All,


I'm coming from many years using FCE. Over the years, from time to time I transfer 8mm film footage. I have the film transferred to SD digital video (on a miniDV tape). When I imported that footage into FCE you could see the "jaggies" right away so I used JES deinterlacer and everything was fine.


In FCPX I have tried to read up on deinterlacing and it isn't very clear how or why or if you deinterlace in FCPX.


Does this sound right? I was importing some film footage into FCPX (SD digital video from a miniDV tape) and there was a screen that asked me how I wanted to import it. So I checked off the box and it said it was going to import it as "progressive". Once imported it looked to me as if the footage was deinterlaced. I couldn't see any "jaggies". I could move in the timeline frame by frame and it was perfect. I even exported some still images to iphoto and there were no "jaggies". I put the footage onto a DVD and it looked fine.


So my question is if I import the film footage as "progressive" does this mean FCPX automatically deinterlaces it? If it's not why I'm I seeing no "jaggies" in any of my footage (which I would see all the time in FCE if I didn't deinterlance).


Thanks for your help.



Mike

Posted on Aug 19, 2012 5:57 PM

Reply
13 replies

Aug 19, 2012 6:27 PM in response to Tom Wolsky

Hello Tom,


I have just checked around a bit and I can't seem to find it. I remember it gave me three options to import the footage and one of them was interlaced and the one I choose was 29.97P. If the footage is not deinterlaced why I'm I not seeing the jaggies? I would see them everytime in FCE.


In FCE I would take freeze frames from the timeline and if it wasn't deinterlaced you would see the jaggies every time in iphoto. I've taken 20 or 30 stills from the FCPX timeline and imported them to iphoto and not one of them has the jaggies.


Mike

Aug 20, 2012 2:02 PM in response to Goldfish

I have tried to re-create the box that asked me if I wanted to import my film as 29.97P (progressive) footage and I can't seem to do it. If I look at my films "properties" in the video property window it shows it as 29.97P footage (it wasn't shot or transferred as that).


I'm I missing something here? Isn't progressive footage by its very nature not interlaced? If the all the film footage I have imported (SD digital video from a miniDV tape) is interlaced why am I not seeing the jaggies? In FCE I saw these all the time.


Mike

Aug 20, 2012 5:02 PM in response to Tom Wolsky

Tom,

The videos are created interlaced because my Sony HDV-PJ50V will give me 52 hours recording time as opposed to twenty some hours using progresive. The main body of the video is 1080i. The outro is 1080p.

I export to QT7 as H.264 via Compressor. It plays beutifully on my 24 inch iMac. It also plays great on You Tube.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ir_YRdS1A8E&list=UUpqHQ2t8Q1AQWO64ljNwn_g&index=1 &feature=plcp


This is the "Get Info" shot.

User uploaded file

Aug 21, 2012 5:11 PM in response to Tom Wolsky

Hello Tom,


I hope you are reading this as I finally have a screen shot and I found the window I was talking about in the original question.


The window box comes up when I'm adding a new project. Under "Video Properties" if I click "Custom" it shows me the format which in my case is NTSC SD, Resolution 720x480 DV and it has three options for frame rates. One is interlaced (29.97i) and the one I'm clicking is 29.97p (progressive).


So I guess my question is: by checking off this box is it importing the film footage as progressive? In that case, I believe I don't have to deinterlace and this would be the reason I'm not seeing any "jaggies".


Mike



User uploaded file

Aug 21, 2012 5:51 PM in response to Michael Ryan.

So I guess my question is: by checking off this box is it importing the film footage as progressive?


No. Your project properties have nothing at all to do with the import function. You import into an event not into a project. The media in an event can be used in any project.


By selecting the option you're selecting you're creating a project that gives a progressive output. This may not be satisfactory if your original media is interlaced.

Aug 21, 2012 6:10 PM in response to Michael Ryan.

The DVD format is designed specifically for display on a television set. It's designed to be either 24fps progressive for film distribution or interlaced for television programming distribution. If you're media is interlaced, to be displayed on television, as the DVD format presumes, then you don't really want it to be deinterlaced. That will only add degradaition and loss of resolution to the image.

This thread has been closed by the system or the community team. You may vote for any posts you find helpful, or search the Community for additional answers.

Deinterlace magic?

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple Account.