ext_42975 (
peacefully.livejournal.com) wrote in
scap_it2004-04-16 07:26 pm
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widescreen/fullscreen part deux.
I'm redoing my Ever After caps and I posted a question yesterday. Which do you prefer screencaps of, Widescreen or Fullscreen? Most people said widescreen (usually with the added comment that fullscreen cuts stuff off) so I did a lot them that way. Then, when I compared the widescreen caps with one of my old full screen ones, I noticed just how much is missing from the widescreen ones. I guess how much is cut from what depends on the movie.
Examples:
widescreen.
fullscreen.
Now, there's no way I'm going to go back and redo the 229 caps I've already done (out of 33 minutes of movie), but the widescreen really seems to be missing a lot more than the full screen is, and I, personally, would prefer the full screen ones for making icons. I don't want the set to be mismatched, but I don't want to post a huge set of half-screen shots.
I think from now on, when capping a DVD that gives me the choice, I'll take one from each and see which cuts less off and do those, but I don't know what to do about my Ever After set.
So should I continue doing them wide screen, or do the rest of the set in fullscreen?
(if this isn't allowed, let me know and I'll delete the post.)
Examples:
widescreen.
fullscreen.
Now, there's no way I'm going to go back and redo the 229 caps I've already done (out of 33 minutes of movie), but the widescreen really seems to be missing a lot more than the full screen is, and I, personally, would prefer the full screen ones for making icons. I don't want the set to be mismatched, but I don't want to post a huge set of half-screen shots.
I think from now on, when capping a DVD that gives me the choice, I'll take one from each and see which cuts less off and do those, but I don't know what to do about my Ever After set.
So should I continue doing them wide screen, or do the rest of the set in fullscreen?
(if this isn't allowed, let me know and I'll delete the post.)
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The example of fullscreen that I showed is one of my old ones and part of the reason I'm redoing them. It's squished because of my old settings, not because it's fullscreen. Now, they are fine. The only difference now is that half of the picture is missing from the widescreen picture.
I guess I'll just finish the set in widescreen and hope people can get some use from them with half the picture missing.
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I would suggest capping things in widescreen if there's a choice, because frankly, no matter what you're using the graphics for, there's more to work with. You can always crop the black bars out as well.
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I believe this is what happened with my Ever After DVD, and so I am asking would people rather me continue capping this movie in widescreen, which cuts out part of the picture, or full screen, which doesn't.
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Anyway, that's obviously the choice you have, so good luck. :)
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Let me explain, if in this instance, the widescreen crops out the top and bottom, but the fullscreen (which the movie was originally filmed in, so it's not cutting anything out) cuts out nothing at all, wouldn't the fullscreen be better because it includes the top and bottom which are "still technically edges that allow more places to put words when you crop squarely"?
See, some companies will film the entire movie in full screen and only crop it to widescreen after the fact for theater and widescreen DVD release, but the original movie was full screen and this is how they release it, in it's entirety, to fullscreen DVD and video tape. So if the widescreen cuts out 1/3rd of the picture, and the fullscreen cuts out nothing at all, wouldn't you prefer the fullscreen caps? More room to make the icon with?
This site (http://www.thedigitalbits.com/articles/anamorphic/aspectratios/widescreenorama2.html) (which is actually very pro-widescreen) explains that some directors actually include more picture in their fullscreen releases. This is the case with the Ever After DVD, and the reason why I'm asking whether I should continue making the caps in widescreen, which I have proven cuts out part of the picture, or whether I should finish them in full screen, which doesn't.
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