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Slideshow Picture Properties |
Apr 7 2006, 02:51 PM
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#1
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Newbie ![]() Group: Members Posts: 6 Joined: 7-April 06 Member No.: 4,981 |
I'm preparing to create a slideshow of my daughter's wedding. I have jpeg pictures, tif pictures, psd pictures, png pictures and dmsp (or whatever Roxio's extension is). There resolutions are 72 ppi (or that may be dpi), 200, and 300. As I started placing these pictures and scrapbook pages on the storyboard, I began to wonder if I'm creating a monster instead of a simple slideshow. Is there a proper resolution for slideshows and a proper extension that should be shared by all pictures?
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Apr 7 2006, 05:05 PM
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#2
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![]() Digital Guru ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Digital Guru Posts: 14,001 Joined: 4-January 06 From: Deep River, Ont. Canada Member No.: 103 |
I'm preparing to create a slideshow of my daughter's wedding. I have jpeg pictures, tif pictures, psd pictures, png pictures and dmsp (or whatever Roxio's extension is). There resolutions are 72 ppi (or that may be dpi), 200, and 300. As I started placing these pictures and scrapbook pages on the storyboard, I began to wonder if I'm creating a monster instead of a simple slideshow. Is there a proper resolution for slideshows and a proper extension that should be shared by all pictures? the resolutions of your source pictures don't really matter since they will all be "converted" to the DVD standard of 720x48 (for NTSC). Check the help system for which picture formats are allowed. BTW, dmsp is not really a picture format but simply the extension Roxio uses for their project files. No other program can open a dmsp file. -------------------- Walt Dell Dimension 4500S;Windows XP Home Edition SP3; Intel® Pentium® 4 CPU 2.00GHz, 784MB RAM (NVIDIA GeForce FX 5200, 128 MB memory disabled because of failure) Intel® 82845G/GL/GE/PE/GV Graphics Controller; DirectX 9.0c (4.09.0000.0904) SoundMAX Digital Audio SamsunG CDR/DVD-ROm SM 332B HLDS GSA-5120D External LG Super-Multi ReWriter WDC WD400BB-75DEA0, 40 GB HD; Prolific PL3507 Combo External Hard Drive, 80 GB; Maxtor 6 L200R0 USB Hard Drive, 250GB HP Pavilion dv6 Notebook; Intel Duo CPU 64 bit, T6400 @ 2.0Ghz; 4.0 GB RAM; Vista Home Premium 64bit Toshiba MK3252GSX ATA 286GB hard drive; HL-DT-ST DVDRAM GSA-T50L ATA burner Intel 4Series Express Chipset |
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Apr 7 2006, 05:53 PM
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#3
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Newbie ![]() Group: Members Posts: 6 Joined: 7-April 06 Member No.: 4,981 |
Thanks for your quick response to my question. I'm not that worried now that I'll make a major mistake!
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Apr 8 2006, 04:04 AM
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#4
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![]() Digital Guru ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Digital Guru Posts: 14,598 Joined: 4-January 06 From: Houston Member No.: 58 |
You may still want to start slow. Try making a short slide show with a few pictures (perhaps 1 or 2 minutes worth) and if that works OK, you can go from there.
BTW, if you take some time with the short slide show with some highlights, you can render it (output as - icon looks like an old film reel) in Video Wave and then add it to the production as the introductory movie that starts when you put the disc in the player. Also BTW, if you do the rendering of that slide show in VideoWave and it hangs, note the time and see what is going on at that time. Doing that is a great way of trouble shooting a production to see if an image (format), transition, effect or music file has/will be a problem. When you go to render, pick mpg2... best quality. Thanks for your quick response to my question. I'm not that worried now that I'll make a major mistake!
-------------------- Steve
As of Aug 20, 2009 PC =Vista Ultimate 64bit SP2 Velocity Micro ProMagix ©HD 60; evga x58 motherboard, Intel i7 @2.93, 6G RAM, Visionteck Radeon HD4870 video card, SoundBlaster X-Fi Xtreme audio card, Creator 2010. Apple =OSX 10.5 MacBook Pro;15.4-inch widescreen display, 2.4GHz Intel Core 2 Duo, 2GB memory, 200GB hard drive, 8x SuperDrive (DVD±R DL/DVD±RW/CD-RW), NVIDIA GeForce 8600M GT with 256MB of GDDR3 memory. ILife 08, Toast 10, Final Cut Express 4 and Photoshop 4. |
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Apr 8 2006, 05:18 AM
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#5
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Newbie ![]() Group: Members Posts: 6 Joined: 7-April 06 Member No.: 4,981 |
You may still want to start slow. Try making a short slide show with a few pictures (perhaps 1 or 2 minutes worth) and if that works OK, you can go from there. BTW, if you take some time with the short slide show with some highlights, you can render it (output as - icon looks like an old film reel) in Video Wave and then add it to the production as the introductory movie that starts when you put the disc in the player. Also BTW, if you do the rendering of that slide show in VideoWave and it hangs, note the time and see what is going on at that time. Doing that is a great way of trouble shooting a production to see if an image (format), transition, effect or music file has/will be a problem. When you go to render, pick mpg2... best quality. Thanks for the additional info. I try that now. |
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Apr 9 2006, 04:21 PM
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#6
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Newbie ![]() Group: Members Posts: 6 Joined: 7-April 06 Member No.: 4,981 |
Thanks for the additional info. I try that now. I used only six picture with various extensions and it did a beautiful job even with the audio I added. It played well on my computer screen, but when I played the DVD on my TV I noticed that the tops and sides of some of the pictures were cut off. Is there any way to correct this problem or will I have to put a border around each of the pictures to rectify this problem. |
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Apr 9 2006, 06:45 PM
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#7
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![]() Digital Guru ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Digital Guru Posts: 16,526 Joined: 4-January 06 From: U.S.A. Member No.: 81 |
I used only six picture with various extensions and it did a beautiful job even with the audio I added. It played well on my computer screen, but when I played the DVD on my TV I noticed that the tops and sides of some of the pictures were cut off. Is there any way to correct this problem or will I have to put a border around each of the pictures to rectify this problem. That is TV overscan and is normal. If you use a free program like Image Cropper to bulk crop those photos to 4:3, they will be within the "safe zone" and will show the entire photo on your television. I don't have the link to Image Cropper handy, but hopefully, someone will drop in and post it. -------------------- Life is good!
GrandpaBruce Vietnam Vet - 1970 - 1971 Main System: ASUS P6T Deluxe V2 LGA 1366 Intel X58 ATX Intel Motherboard; Cooler Master ATCS 840 Case Intel Core i7 920 Nehalem 2.66GHz 4 x 256KB L2 Cache 8MB L3 Cache LGA 1366 130W Quad-Core Processor CORSAIR DOMINATOR 3GB (3 x 1GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1866 PLEXTOR Black DVD Burner, Model PX-880SA; Pioneer Black 8X BD-R 2X BD-RE 16X DVD+R Burner XFX HD-489A-ZDFC Radeon HD 4890 1GB Video Card Creative Sound Blaster X-Fi Titanium Fatal1ty Champion Series Sound Card Windows XP Pro w/SP3 |
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Apr 9 2006, 07:12 PM
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#8
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![]() Digital Beer Guru Group: Digital Guru Posts: -87,596 Joined: 4-January 06 From: Just Outside The Big Easy Member No.: 79 |
That is TV overscan and is normal. If you use a free program like Image Cropper to bulk crop those photos to 4:3, they will be within the "safe zone" and will show the entire photo on your television. I don't have the link to Image Cropper handy, but hopefully, someone will drop in and post it. You can find it here: http://www.darkwood.demon.co.uk/PC/crop.htm -------------------- Paul
------ "Certainty of death, small chance of success... well, what're we waiting for?" Gimli Hallowed are the Ori Custom Built ASUS M4A79T Deluxe - AMD X4-955-Corsair XMS3 8GB DDR3 Memory-XFX HD-487A-ZHFC Radeon HD 4870 1GB Vid card - Sony & Pioneer DVD Drives-HAF922 Case-1 WD 1TB, 1 Seagate 1TB and 1 Rack Drive-HVR 2250 & HDHomerun Tuners- Creative Soundblaster X-Fi Titanium- Acer H233H monitor Tri Boot/XP/Vista/W7 |
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Apr 9 2006, 07:12 PM
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#9
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![]() Digital Guru ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Digital Guru Posts: 14,109 Joined: 4-January 06 From: Maryville, TN Member No.: 49 |
Get Image Cropper here. Always keep it handy.
QUOTE will I have to put a border around each of the pictures to rectify this problem. That's exactly what Image Cropper can do and makes it very easy. Also has a batch mode. You can also choose the border color. Image Cropper also supports many other aspect ratios like 16:9, 4x6, 5x7 , etc. This post has been edited by ggrussell: Apr 9 2006, 07:16 PM -------------------- Phenom X4 965 3.4Ghz, 4gig DDR3, Westinghouse 42" TV/monitor, one 250gig SATA2, one 500GB SATA2, Philips-LiteOn DX20A6Q, Mad Dog 16XDVD9A2 (NEC3520A OEM), ATI HD3300 IGP, VIA HiDef audio with Logitech Z5500 THX certified 5.1 speakers, Epson 4490 scanner, Epson Stylus PhotoR1800 printer, Sharp AL1551CS laser printer/copier, Sony TRV740 8mm digital, Canon HV20 HDV camcorder and Fuji S7000 for still photos, Win7 Home Premium
--------- System 2: Gateway 7320GZ laptop, 2.8Ghz P4 HT, 1gig RAM, 80gig HD, GWA-4080N DVD burner, Intel Extreme Graphics 2, Conexant AMC audio (AC'97), WinXP Home Edition with SP3 Gary Russell TNUSA |
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Apr 9 2006, 07:25 PM
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#10
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![]() Digital Guru ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Digital Guru Posts: 16,526 Joined: 4-January 06 From: U.S.A. Member No.: 81 |
And the winner is..............Paul and Gary. hehehehe. Thanks, for posting the link, you two.
-------------------- Life is good!
GrandpaBruce Vietnam Vet - 1970 - 1971 Main System: ASUS P6T Deluxe V2 LGA 1366 Intel X58 ATX Intel Motherboard; Cooler Master ATCS 840 Case Intel Core i7 920 Nehalem 2.66GHz 4 x 256KB L2 Cache 8MB L3 Cache LGA 1366 130W Quad-Core Processor CORSAIR DOMINATOR 3GB (3 x 1GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1866 PLEXTOR Black DVD Burner, Model PX-880SA; Pioneer Black 8X BD-R 2X BD-RE 16X DVD+R Burner XFX HD-489A-ZDFC Radeon HD 4890 1GB Video Card Creative Sound Blaster X-Fi Titanium Fatal1ty Champion Series Sound Card Windows XP Pro w/SP3 |
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Apr 10 2006, 04:32 AM
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#11
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Newbie ![]() Group: Members Posts: 6 Joined: 7-April 06 Member No.: 4,981 |
[quote name='grandpabruce' date='Apr 9 2006, 07:25 PM' post='22547']
And the winner is..............Paul and Gary. hehehehe. Thanks, for posting the link, you two. [/quo Thank you, thank you, thank you! |
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Apr 10 2006, 04:34 AM
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#12
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![]() Digital Guru ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Digital Guru Posts: 16,526 Joined: 4-January 06 From: U.S.A. Member No.: 81 |
You are welcome.
-------------------- Life is good!
GrandpaBruce Vietnam Vet - 1970 - 1971 Main System: ASUS P6T Deluxe V2 LGA 1366 Intel X58 ATX Intel Motherboard; Cooler Master ATCS 840 Case Intel Core i7 920 Nehalem 2.66GHz 4 x 256KB L2 Cache 8MB L3 Cache LGA 1366 130W Quad-Core Processor CORSAIR DOMINATOR 3GB (3 x 1GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1866 PLEXTOR Black DVD Burner, Model PX-880SA; Pioneer Black 8X BD-R 2X BD-RE 16X DVD+R Burner XFX HD-489A-ZDFC Radeon HD 4890 1GB Video Card Creative Sound Blaster X-Fi Titanium Fatal1ty Champion Series Sound Card Windows XP Pro w/SP3 |
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Lo-Fi Version | Time is now: 21st November 2009 - 12:43 PM |