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I am trying to make logo psd file transparency back ground for 16:9 project. 720x576 pixel I use for 4:3 PAL size, it is good.
You have too many pixels in width so will need to crop and too few in height so you will add black letterbox ING bars or scale that will lower quality and further reduce the width. If you want portrait outputs you really need to aquire in portrait.
Crop the sides (128 pixels per side) or letterbox. Decide which route and then just frameflex it. If the grade divers 16:9 UHD they will have to do the same. But they will see that from your offline guide. The biggest danger is the 4k gets squeezed into UHD.
A number of solutions to this. You can crop the 16:9 left and right to make 4:3 or part crop and part letterbox (as Uk broadcasters do) to make 14:9 image in a 4:3 frame.
Hi there, I have a request from a network that I've never come acroos before. From a 1080p HD / 23.98 project (1920x1080), ten 30 second shorts were cut.
16:9 and full-frame are opposites. 16x9 is a widescreen format, approximately 1.76:1. Full-frame is standard "academy" size, 1.33:1.
The grid coordinates can be expressed in traditional fields or X-Y pixels in any resolution. You can use the Effect Grid to: Display the aspect ratios for film categories such as standard film, Academy, Super 35 mm, and Anamorphic, as well as the 4:3 safety area for the 16:9 aspect ratio.
I need to deliver a 16:9 HD show that also requires titles to be within 4:3 title safe. Since I am working in 16:9, the grid lines in the Tite Tool are also 16:9.
Hello, Would anyone be able to teach me how to blur out the black side panels you get from using 4:3 vision on a 16:9 sequence in MC6?
Its a social media thing as turning the phone through 90 degrees is too much! So I started off a new project in 1080x1920 format and bought in my 1920x1080 sequence and frame flexed it via crop.