The author posted a question in Photography, Videography
How do you combine videos with different resolutions into one project so that you don't see a sharp transition? and got a better answer
Response from Антон Владимирович[+++++]
1920x1440 there's no way you can fit it into 4:3, you can only cut it off from the sides, with any video editor, or you can compress it, but it will distort horizontally. 4:3 is dead. the funeral was 5 years ago
Response from 0[+++++]
1920x1440 you can't cram in 4:3 only cut it off from the sides, in any video editor, or compress it, but it will be distorted horizontally. 4:3 is dead. the funeral took place about 5 years ago
1920x1440 you can't cram in 4:3 only cut it off from the sides, in any video editor, or compress it, but it will be distorted horizontally. 4:3 is dead. the funeral took place about 5 years ago
Response from 0[+++++]
increase until the bars disappear
increase until the bars disappear
Response from 0[+++++]
If you want the final format to be 4:3 1920x1440 then you should leave the black bars. When editing, group the 4:3 clips into one pile and the widescreen into another to make pauses between them so the difference doesn't hurt your viewer's eyes.
If you want the final format to be 4:3 1920x1440 then you should leave the black bars. When editing, group the 4:3 clips into one pile and the widescreen into another to make pauses between them so the difference doesn't hurt your viewer's eyes.
Response from 0[+++++]
not realistic
not realistic
Response from 0[+++++]
For the record, 1920x1440 doesn't exist. Where are you going to watch such a non-standard entity? There is HDV 1440x1080 but it is NOT 4:3 in ANY WAY, it is 16:9 only shot with an anamorphic pixel that stretches to that FullHD 1920x1080.
For the record, 1920x1440 doesn't exist. Where are you going to watch such a non-standard entity? There is HDV 1440x1080 but it is NOT 4:3 in ANY WAY, it is 16:9 only shot with an anamorphic pixel that stretches to that FullHD 1920x1080.