View Full Version : How do I improve old video movies?
Frank Martin
July 5th 05, 05:04 AM
I have an old tape camcorder with video output and I want to put all my old
tapes on to DVDs.
I will buy a video-capture card with sound to do this.
I want to know how to "photoshop" the movies, that is how can I enhance the
movie frame-by-frame using software.
Microsoft has a thing called 'MovieMaker' and I want to download my movies
via the videocard on to this.
Can someone help me with the most efficient way to do this and to enhance
the movie images?
Please help, Frank
Cari \(MS-MVP\)
July 5th 05, 07:37 PM
MovieMaker won't capture directly from the analog camcorder. You'll have to
use analog capture software and an analog capture card... see
www.videohelp.com.
Once it's captured, Windows MovieMaker will happily edit the footage.
If you're familiar with PhotoShop, you might want to try Adobe's Premiere
(www.adobe.com) But it's a long very tiring job to enhance each frame...
there will be 30 of them per second if you're in NTSC land and 25 per second
if you're in PAL land.
--
Cari (MS-MVP)
Printing & Imaging
"Frank Martin" > wrote in message
...
>I have an old tape camcorder with video output and I want to put all my old
>tapes on to DVDs.
>
> I will buy a video-capture card with sound to do this.
>
> I want to know how to "photoshop" the movies, that is how can I enhance
> the movie frame-by-frame using software.
> Microsoft has a thing called 'MovieMaker' and I want to download my movies
> via the videocard on to this.
>
> Can someone help me with the most efficient way to do this and to enhance
> the movie images?
>
> Please help, Frank
>
Jimbo
July 6th 05, 01:00 AM
Sony makes a little box, you just plug you vcr in, push play and push record
and it puts on DVD for you. Save hundreds of hours. Records in real time.
It's only $235.00
"Frank Martin" > wrote in message
...
> I have an old tape camcorder with video output and I want to put all my
old
> tapes on to DVDs.
>
> I will buy a video-capture card with sound to do this.
>
> I want to know how to "photoshop" the movies, that is how can I enhance
the
> movie frame-by-frame using software.
> Microsoft has a thing called 'MovieMaker' and I want to download my movies
> via the videocard on to this.
>
> Can someone help me with the most efficient way to do this and to enhance
> the movie images?
>
> Please help, Frank
>
>
gillword
July 6th 05, 06:00 AM
there is very little you can do to "enhance" the video. At best you can hope
fore 5% improvement. First you need a good video capture card. It is best if
the card can capture it in raw MPEG video if you will be doing a lot of
editing, witch you will need to do to improve to video. Then you will need a
good video editing program Microsoft's Movie Maker is not one of them. Movie
Maker can only do the most basic things and save in Microsoft's formats. A
good video editing software is Video Mach from Gromada.com and it is free
fore non commercial use! The two easiest ways to improve the video are,
bicubic resizeing and psychovisual enhancement. not all codecs can use
bicubic and psychovisual enhancement so you will need to find a codec that
can.
"Frank Martin" wrote:
> I have an old tape camcorder with video output and I want to put all my old
> tapes on to DVDs.
>
> I will buy a video-capture card with sound to do this.
>
> I want to know how to "photoshop" the movies, that is how can I enhance the
> movie frame-by-frame using software.
> Microsoft has a thing called 'MovieMaker' and I want to download my movies
> via the videocard on to this.
>
> Can someone help me with the most efficient way to do this and to enhance
> the movie images?
>
> Please help, Frank
>
>
>
Graham Hughes
July 7th 05, 06:22 PM
I'd tend to disagree with using raw mpeg, dv-avi is a much easier format to
edit, it is uncompressed at the capture stage and you can edit frame by
frame. Mpegs would limit editing to i frames only, which may be seconds
apart. I must say though I haven't heard of Video Mach. MM can save in a
variety of formats, dv-avi being one and is distinctly not MS only.
A good video editing app will allow you to do what you want to do. If the
quality is poor, then you cannot hope to improve it and I'd say your 5% may
be right...crap in crap out and all that :)
If you use photoshop and want to do each frame individually, then why not
export all the frames and do it in photoshop, then put them all back into an
editor, very long work, not something I'd do.......
--
Graham Hughes
MVP Digital Media
www.myvideoproblems.co.uk
www.dvds2treasure.com
www.simplydv.com
"gillword" > wrote in message
...
> there is very little you can do to "enhance" the video. At best you can
> hope
> fore 5% improvement. First you need a good video capture card. It is best
> if
> the card can capture it in raw MPEG video if you will be doing a lot of
> editing, witch you will need to do to improve to video. Then you will need
> a
> good video editing program Microsoft's Movie Maker is not one of them.
> Movie
> Maker can only do the most basic things and save in Microsoft's formats. A
> good video editing software is Video Mach from Gromada.com and it is free
> fore non commercial use! The two easiest ways to improve the video are,
> bicubic resizeing and psychovisual enhancement. not all codecs can use
> bicubic and psychovisual enhancement so you will need to find a codec
> that
> can.
>
> "Frank Martin" wrote:
>
>> I have an old tape camcorder with video output and I want to put all my
>> old
>> tapes on to DVDs.
>>
>> I will buy a video-capture card with sound to do this.
>>
>> I want to know how to "photoshop" the movies, that is how can I enhance
>> the
>> movie frame-by-frame using software.
>> Microsoft has a thing called 'MovieMaker' and I want to download my
>> movies
>> via the videocard on to this.
>>
>> Can someone help me with the most efficient way to do this and to enhance
>> the movie images?
>>
>> Please help, Frank
>>
>>
>>
Cari \(MS-MVP\)
July 8th 05, 04:47 AM
In fact the only person I can think of that might even attempt it is George
Lucas... and then only with a large team of experts and a LOT of computers!
But then he also has a large budget.
--
Cari (MS-MVP)
Printing & Imaging
"Graham Hughes" > wrote in message
...
> I'd tend to disagree with using raw mpeg, dv-avi is a much easier format
> to edit, it is uncompressed at the capture stage and you can edit frame by
> frame. Mpegs would limit editing to i frames only, which may be seconds
> apart. I must say though I haven't heard of Video Mach. MM can save in a
> variety of formats, dv-avi being one and is distinctly not MS only.
> A good video editing app will allow you to do what you want to do. If the
> quality is poor, then you cannot hope to improve it and I'd say your 5%
> may be right...crap in crap out and all that :)
>
> If you use photoshop and want to do each frame individually, then why not
> export all the frames and do it in photoshop, then put them all back into
> an editor, very long work, not something I'd do.......
>
> --
> Graham Hughes
> MVP Digital Media
> www.myvideoproblems.co.uk
> www.dvds2treasure.com
> www.simplydv.com
>
M.L.
July 10th 05, 10:10 PM
>I have an old tape camcorder with video output and I want to put all my old
>tapes on to DVDs.
>
>I will buy a video-capture card with sound to do this.
>
>I want to know how to "photoshop" the movies, that is how can I enhance the
>movie frame-by-frame using software.
>Microsoft has a thing called 'MovieMaker' and I want to download my movies
>via the videocard on to this.
>
>Can someone help me with the most efficient way to do this and to enhance
>the movie images?
Go to the Canopus website and look for their latest external firewire
capture device (the ADVC-300 ??). It is said to actually make VHS
captures look better than the original. It is somewhat expensive (~
$500.), but I've read nothing but excellent reviews about it in the
rec.video.desktop group.
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