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Jul 27, 2015 8:04 PM in response to bkkrocksby Russ H,The DVD standard is MPEG2 with a bit rate <9 Mbps. You should use the DVD preset for that. If it is under 2 hours, you shouldn't have any problems fitting it on a single layer disk, Otherwise, use dual layer.
Russ
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Jul 27, 2015 10:52 PM in response to Russ Hby bkkrocks,Yes, I should have mentioned that I tried the DVD preset and it came out to something like 3.5 GB. However, even though the file size is bigger than the 2 GB "most compatible" option, it appears to me that the 2 gig version looks a tad better. I'm not sure if I'm hallucinating since I've been looking at my computer screen for so long ;-)
In an ideal world, I'd like the file to be just small enough, for example, by 1 MB so that it can look as good as possible and still fit on a standard DVD.
Naive question: does having a layer of "video" underneath another layer of video create a larger file? Since I've set the opacity of all video clips to 100%, my guess is that it should NOT result in a larger file (like a Photoshop file that has multiple layers but is flattened before saving as, say, a .png file.
Thanks for your suggestion; I'll definitely consider going that route.
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Jul 28, 2015 4:27 AM in response to bkkrocksby Russ H,★Helpfulbkkrocks wrote:
I'm not sure if I'm hallucinating since I've been looking at my computer screen for so long ;-)
A computer display won' show it correctly, Evaluated it plays from a DVD player to a TV screen.
bkkrocks wrote:
In an ideal world, I'd like the file to be just small enough, for example, by 1 MB so that it can look as good as possible and still fit on a standard DVD.
You can increase the bit rate and see whether you notice the difference – and (importantly) whether the DVD player plays it smoothly. The higher you go the more like;y it is you will run into playability issues. So probably don't go too far above 7 Mbps (if the length of your video allows even that high of a rate.)
Naive question: does having a layer of "video" underneath another layer of video create a larger file? Since I've set the opacity of all video clips to 100%, my guess is that it should NOT result in a larger file (like a Photoshop file that has multiple layers but is flattened before saving as, say, a .png file.
Your assumption is correct; it won't increase size.
Russ
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Aug 1, 2015 1:12 AM in response to Russ Hby bkkrocks,For what it's worth, I didn't know how to modify the presets and that's basically what I finally decided to do. One preset is referred to as best quality. That is what I wanted: a video with the best quality possible. However, the problem was that the resulting file was just a tad too big to burn to a standard DVD. So after trying this and that, I went back and modified the bit rate. As I played with the bit rate, Compressor would show me the approximate file size. After trial and error, I was able to create an .m4v file that is just small enough to burn but as big as possible without being too big (4.53 GB).
I don't know if anyone else will face a similar situation but that's what I did and I like the quality of the resulting file. (Note that using the preset "most compatible", the file size was 2 GB.)
I hope this thread will help someone in the future; perhaps his/her choice will be different but I hope he/she will be aware of the options available :-)
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Aug 1, 2015 7:27 AM in response to bkkrocksby Russ H,Glad you were able to get the outcome you wanted.
Out of curiosity, how did you burn the DVD?
Russ