Wolf-man (post: 1405092) wrote:Hey I have a question for all you tech guys. I am trying to edit my own movies. However, I have a problem with keeping good quality. I will rip a DVD or use a video file and cut scenes but when I save the finished product the quality is not as good as the original file. What program is the best to use for this and how can I keep the original quality? Thanks in advanced!
Wolf-man (post: 1405092) wrote:Hey I have a question for all you tech guys. I am trying to edit my own movies. However, I have a problem with keeping good quality. I will rip a DVD or use a video file and cut scenes but when I save the finished product the quality is not as good as the original file. What program is the best to use for this and how can I keep the original quality? Thanks in advanced!
Mithrandir (post: 1405959) wrote:If you are editing "your own movies" meaning you have the raw footage, edit using that. Don't rip from a DVD - that's already compressed. It's pretty much impossible to compress something twice with lossy encoding and get even close to the same quality you started with.
Wolf-man (post: 1406174) wrote:I'm not editing my own movies. I'm talking about ripping movies from DVDs (that I own) and editing out content through my computer. Like Cleanflicks used to do.
Wolf-man (post: 1406612) wrote:No the reason Cleanflicks got shut was because they were selling and making money off the copies and not getting permission to do so by the creators. I own the movies therefore I have the legal right to make as many copies as I want so long as I do not distribute them nor sell them. There is no law against editing movies for private use. Actually there is no law against editing movies period so long as you do not sell/give them away nor take credit as your own work. So what I am doing is perfectly in my legal rights to do so.
Mithrandir (post: 1405959) wrote:If you are editing "your own movies" meaning you have the raw footage, edit using that. Don't rip from a DVD - that's already compressed.
Wolf-man (post: 1406612) wrote:No the reason Cleanflicks got shut was because they were selling and making money off the copies and not getting permission to do so by the creators. I own the movies therefore I have the legal right to make as many copies as I want so long as I do not distribute them nor sell them. There is no law against editing movies for private use. Actually there is no law against editing movies period so long as you do not sell/give them away nor take credit as your own work. So what I am doing is perfectly in my legal rights to do so.
bob wrote:Problem is you can't FIND "raw footage" at the consumer level anymore. Consumer Mini-DV is dead, in favor of compressed (and impossible to do REAL editing other than simple cutting) video on harddrives, and worse, DVD and Bluray cameras...
Mithrandir (post: 1406884) wrote:I was unaware of this. We must have pretty high-level cameras where I work then, because we routinely capture data in RAW formats.
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