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Burning 720 x 480 SD clips to Blu-ray
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Re: Burning 720 x 480 SD clips to Blu-rayJust last year, I had a VHS-to-disc job that someone hired me to do for them. She brought me an entire box full of tapes, resulting in nearly 20-30 hours of footage. She wanted 4 copies of each tape made into discs for her to give out to family members. I did the math and found that the better way to go - if they all had a Blu-Ray players - would be to try burning them all to Blu-Ray discs, narrowing something like 15 DVDs per person (the math was done via which tapes belonged to which person, not how much can fit on a disc) down to only about 3 Blu-Ray discs per person. It worked, and it's actually very easy to do. When you do your burning project, you simply tell it you're using a Blu-Ray disc, but that you're burning SD footage. It calculates it as if you've simply given it a 25GB DVD and burns it that way, it just has to be played on a Blu-Ray player.
Dell Studio XPS 8100, Intel Core i7 2.8GHz, 4GB RAM, 64-Bit Win7. Camera gear: 2x Canon 550D's, 1x Canon EOS 6D body, Sigma 70-200mm f2.8 & 17-50mm f2.8, Canon EF 50mm f/1.8 & 24-70mm f/2.8L, and two 420EX flashes.
Re: Burning 720 x 480 SD clips to Blu-rayThat would be very good Kent but Premiere Elements does not have an option to burn SD to Blu Ray as far as I know. Did you use Premiere Pro for that project?
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Re: Burning 720 x 480 SD clips to Blu-rayI've done this with DVDAS. Even mixed SD and HD in the same project, if I recall.
Be yourself; everyone else is taken.
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Re: Burning 720 x 480 SD clips to Blu-ray
Thanks, Dave. I am not acquainted with DVDAS. Is that an acronym for a longer program name?
Re: Burning 720 x 480 SD clips to Blu-raySorry Di. Sony's DVD Architect Studio. It's sold stand-alone for about $35.00 if I recall. Originally for creating fairly sophisticated DVD menuing/burning and then upgraded to work with Blu-ray. With discs falling out of favor it hasn't seen any upgrades lately, but it still works fine for that purpose. It has somewhat of a learning curve but Steve did write a good book on it. You edit your project in your favorite editing program, output your finished product as MPEGs and then import into DVDAS where you create your menus and output to disc.
Be yourself; everyone else is taken.
Asus X570-E motherboard; AMD Ryzen 9 3900X 3.8 GHz; 64GB DDR4; GeForce RTX 2060 6GB; 1TB Samsung 970 Pro M.2 SSD
Re: Burning 720 x 480 SD clips to Blu-rayChuck & Dave - I also used Sony DVD Architect for my burning software. It's pretty intuitive, actually. You simply tell it HD or SD, then how large a disc you're using. It adjusts to size automatically. I found that getting much more than about 7 or 8 hours on 1 disc and your quality tanks pretty quickly.
Dell Studio XPS 8100, Intel Core i7 2.8GHz, 4GB RAM, 64-Bit Win7. Camera gear: 2x Canon 550D's, 1x Canon EOS 6D body, Sigma 70-200mm f2.8 & 17-50mm f2.8, Canon EF 50mm f/1.8 & 24-70mm f/2.8L, and two 420EX flashes.
Re: Burning 720 x 480 SD clips to Blu-ray
Perfect! Thank you! I may consider this program if I am confronted with a project of this nature again.
Re: Burning 720 x 480 SD clips to Blu-ray
Grateful for your input, Kent. Helpful!
Re: Burning 720 x 480 SD clips to Blu-rayMuch more powerful dvd authoring from DVDAS than from Premiere Elements, that's why a lot of the elements users also have that program for authoring DVDs. I always used Adobe Encore DVD and that was nice as well. Thanks for the great input guys, I learn new stuff here every day
1. Thinkpad W530 Laptop, Core i7-3820QM Processor 8M Cache 3.70 GHz, 16 GB DDR3, NVIDIA Quadro K1000M 2GB Memory.
2. Cybertron PC - Liquid Cooled AMD FX6300, 6 cores, 3.50ghz - 32GB DDR3 - MSI GeForce GTX 960 Gaming 4G, 4GB Video Ram, 1024 Cuda Cores.
Re: Burning 720 x 480 SD clips to Blu-ray
Great to know! I will try Adobe Encore DVD. I do not see a Mac version of Sony DVD Architect Studio. Is it just a Windows/PC program?
Re: Burning 720 x 480 SD clips to Blu-ray
According to the specs it's Windows only. I take it that's a deal breaker. Be yourself; everyone else is taken.
Asus X570-E motherboard; AMD Ryzen 9 3900X 3.8 GHz; 64GB DDR4; GeForce RTX 2060 6GB; 1TB Samsung 970 Pro M.2 SSD
Re: Burning 720 x 480 SD clips to Blu-rayUnfortunately Adobe Encore DVD is now a thing of the past, Adobe quit making it a couple years ago. Not sure if the prior versions will work with Windows 10 but I assume they would.
I don't see a MAC version for DVD Architect either, someone here must know if it exists or not... 1. Thinkpad W530 Laptop, Core i7-3820QM Processor 8M Cache 3.70 GHz, 16 GB DDR3, NVIDIA Quadro K1000M 2GB Memory.
2. Cybertron PC - Liquid Cooled AMD FX6300, 6 cores, 3.50ghz - 32GB DDR3 - MSI GeForce GTX 960 Gaming 4G, 4GB Video Ram, 1024 Cuda Cores.
Re: Burning 720 x 480 SD clips to Blu-rayThere is no Mac version of DVDAS.
Re: Burning 720 x 480 SD clips to Blu-ray
Thank you! I will cease my search.
Re: Burning 720 x 480 SD clips to Blu-rayAdobe Encore CS6 is the last release of that product. But, it installs as part of Adobe Premiere Pro CS6. You can also get it if you subscribe to Creative Cloud with either a full cc subscription or a single application subscription to Premiere Pro CC. With the subscription route, you are allowed to install Premiere Pro CS6 which will also install Encore CS6.
If you've been thinking of moving to Premiere Pro either CS6 or CC, this might be a viable route.
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