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Quicktime 10 For Mac Convert From 4 3 To 16 9 Aspect Ratio

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I shoot in HDV and downconvert when capturing to SD anamorphic. In FCP my sequence settings are 720x480 3:2 anamorphic. When I export to quicktime movie it comes out in 4:3 instead of 16x9. If I make a DVD in IDVD it makes the movie in 4:3 even though I enter 16:9 setup. In DVDSP it does come out the way I want it in 16:9. Why is my Quicktime Movie coming out in 4:3? Thank you.
Hi Arnie,
I could spend some technical pages explaining why this happens, but let's just stick to the basics.
This is a known issue with anamorphic video in iDVD. The solution is simple:
Open your movie in QT player and press CMD+J or choose Window > Show Movie Properties.
In the Properties window, click Video Track in the Name column.
Click the Visual Settings button.
Deselect the checkbox for Preserve Aspect Ratio.
Change the Scaled Size:
For NTSC, enter 853 x 480.
For PAL, enter 1024 x 576.
Now the movie should be displayed at a 16:9 aspect ratio.
Choose File > Save to save the movie.
Drop this movie in iDVD and your video will be 16:9
Best wishes,
Ronny
Ronny, It worked perfectly. Thank you!
Should this process be followed when using DVDSP or it doesn't matter. Thank you.
DVDSP recognizes anamorphic video, so that's not a problem. In DVDSP you just select the imported movie and you choose the 16:9 format in the Inspector.
Best wishes,
Ronny
I have made many DVD's for clients with IDVD. What threw me off is that 1 of my wide screen TV's plays them correctly in 16:9. I will have to go back and redo all these jobs but I'm happy I got this resolved. Thank you.
Some tvs can be set to automatically stretch to widescreen. That's not always an advantage because on such a tv you never know if your image is correct or not.
Best wishes,
Ronny
Ronny,
I wanted to ask if this solution would apply to another issue. I shot a 2 camera job with 1 HDV camera (1440x1080) and the JVC 700 at the frame size of (1920x1080) When I went to edit, FCP 6 did not want to make a multiclip combining the 2 sources because of the difference in frame size. Could I take the JVC files, open them in a Quicktime movie, change them to 1440x1080 and then try to make a multi clip? 2nd question is, Does FCP 7 take care of this issue all together, meaning you can put anything you want on the time line and FCP 7 will handle it?
thank you,
Arnie
Ronny hi,
This is not working on my new mac pro. I tried QT 10 and QT 7. IDVD is not recognizing 16x9.
Thank you
Hi Arnie,
1. Your question about the two formats.
FCP can handle mixed formats, but I never do that because it slows down your editing process. When I have to use multiple formats in an edit I always convert everything to ProRes, then edit in ProRes all the way. This is the fastest workflow because ProRes puts much less strain on your computing resources. It also is the best quality workflow because everything you do is rendered to a high quality 4:2:2 codec, including all your effects, graphics, titles etc..
Now multicam is a different beast. To make a multiclip ALL your sources must have the same format and frame size, which is quite logical. Here again, converting all your sources to ProRes and working in a ProRes multiclip will save you loads of time during editing and it will improve your final quality. A few weeks ago I did a 10-camera music show in ProRes 1080. Wprked flawlessly, everything in real time and no hickups. A similar edit with only 5 sources of EX or HDV footage would immediately slow down your system.
2. IDVD.
The solution I have mentioned (changing the size in QT Pro) is a very old and proven workflow and I have never heard anyone say this does not work. So if it does not work for you, that's interesting to hear. Let's see where things can have gone wrong.
1. Open your original quicktime in QT Pro (10 or 7, it does not matter). Does the movie open in a 16:9 frame ?
2. If the video does not play in 16:9, choose Window > Show Movie Properties > Video Track > Visual Settings. What is the frame size of your movie ?
3. If the video does play widescreen in your QT player, create a NEW iDVD project, choose the 16:9 preset and drop your movie in iDVD. Pres the play button to test your DVD. Does it play widescreen ?
Best wishes,
Ronny
IDVD.
Yes. When I make a quicktime movie it does play in a 16x9 frame in the QT player.
No. It does not play 16x9 in IDVD. it plays squeezed in a 4x3 frame.
thank you,
Arnie
Okay Arnie, thanks.
Can you open the file in QT player, choose Window > Show Movie Properties > Video Track > Visual Settings and tell me what is the frame size of your movie ? I think I know where the problem is.
Best wishes,
Ronny
Ronny,
QT 10 under the window tab only has 'movie inspector' and no 'movie properties'
that says: Current Size: 853x480
Thank you,
Arnie
Hi Arnie,
Close iDVD.
Go to your Macintosh HD > username > Library > Pereferences.
In the Preferences folder, look for the file 'com.apple.iDVD.plist'. Trash the file.
Now open iDVD, create an entirely new 16:9 project and import the QT movie in the project. Does it play widescreen now ?
Best wishes,
Ronny
Ronny, no it did not play in 16x9
Arnie
Okay, I'm totally lost now. Can you open the QT video in QT player and make a screenshot of the player ?
Best wishes,
Ronny
Ronny,
I don't know how to do a screen shot. But what will a screen shot of the player show you?
thanks,
Arnie
Open QT player, press SHIFT+CMD+4 and drag a selection around the picture in your QT player. A screenshot of your picture will appear on your desktop. Attach the picture to your post.
But I have noticed in your post above that you say it DID work for you, only not on your new MacPro. So the problem is not with your QT file, but with iDVD on your MacPro. Which version of iDVD are you running on that machine ?
Best wishes,
Ronny
Ronny,
A friend of mine is having the same problem. IDVD won't recognize 16x9. He is using an imac with snow leopord. I am using the latest version of IDVD. Again, there is no problem with the G5 and the previous OS. I will contact apple on this.
Arnie
Hi,
I have a similar problem, but cannot use the cmd+J option to get the Quicktime movie to play in widescreen as this just plays the movie backwards the beginning (no 'Show movie properties' in the Quicktime Window tab ).
My version of Compressor no longer works with Yosemite, so I was trying to export a few clips I need for a conference by using the Quicktime Compressor option when I export from FCP6 (having already exported the 50 seconds or so of footage as a QT movie - which plays as widescreen as I would expect - at 180 mb it's too big a file). Whatever setting I use, the compressed movie plays in 4:3.
Any suggestions?
Thanks,
Andy
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  1. Change Aspect Ratio Quicktime
  2. Quicktime 10 For Mac Convert From 4 3 To 16 9 Aspect Ratio Equation
  3. Quicktime 10 For Mac Convert From 4 3 To 16 9 Aspect Rational

Deselect the checkbox for Preserve Aspect Ratio. Change the Scaled Size: For NTSC, enter 853 x 480. For PAL, enter 1024 x 576. Now the movie should be displayed at a 16:9 aspect ratio. Choose File Save to save the movie. Drop this movie in iDVD and your video will be 16:9 Best wishes, Ronny. Change Video from 4:3 Aspect Ratio to 16:9, Which Program is Capable? The far-famed MacX HD Video Converter Pro for Windows or (Mac version) lives up to its reputation to convert among HD and SD videos like AVCHD, MTS, MKV, MP4, MOV, FLV, AVI, WMV, VOB, MPEG, etc. While allowing you to change video aspect ratio such as from 4:3 to 16:9, 3:2 to 16:9 and vice versa without sacrificing any.

This video resizer can resize and scale the width and height of the video, enlarge or reduce video frame size, and can support various video files, such as MP4, AVI, FLV, MOV, 3GP, MKV, WMV etc. You can specify the width and height, or stretch in a specified ratio, or crop in a specified ratio. The output format is the most popular MP4 video.
  1. Select a video file (such as *.mp4, *.mkv, *.avi, *.wmv, *.flv, *.mov, *.vob, *.3gp, *.rmvb, *.mts, *.m2ts, *.rm, *.divx, *.asf, *.webm and more).
  2. Select a size option, enter a valid value for width or height as needed.
  3. Click button 'Resize' to start upload your files.
  4. Once upload completed, converter will redirect a web page to show the resized result.
Quicktime 10 for mac convert from 4 3 to 16 9 aspect ratio mean

. Convert between 4:3, 16:9, 1:1 and portrait 9:16, custom aspect ratio, etc. Select a fixed aspect ratio, and export the video at different resolutions of the same aspect ratio. Crop the unwanted area of the video and fit to the screen to keep a fixed resolution. This is a small Go program that takes a 4:3 aspect ratio video file, and transforms it to a 16:9 video using the GoPro SuperView method. This means that the image is not naively scaled, but a dynamic scaling is applied where the outer areas are stretched more while the center parts stay close to the original aspect rate.

Size Options:
Quicktime player change aspect ratio

Change Aspect Ratio Quicktime

Quicktime 10 For Mac Convert From 4 3 To 16 9 Aspect Ratio

. Convert between 4:3, 16:9, 1:1 and portrait 9:16, custom aspect ratio, etc. Select a fixed aspect ratio, and export the video at different resolutions of the same aspect ratio. Crop the unwanted area of the video and fit to the screen to keep a fixed resolution. This is a small Go program that takes a 4:3 aspect ratio video file, and transforms it to a 16:9 video using the GoPro SuperView method. This means that the image is not naively scaled, but a dynamic scaling is applied where the outer areas are stretched more while the center parts stay close to the original aspect rate.

Size Options:

Change Aspect Ratio Quicktime

  1. Width and Height
    Scale video to the specified width and height with the same aspect ratio as the original movie, the scaled height or width is adjusted to fit.
  2. Width and Height (fixed)
    Stretching option, the output width and height are fixed, without keeping the original aspect ratio, video frames may be distorted.
  3. Width and Height (crop)
    Crop the specified width and height (centered on the video frame).
  4. Auto Remove Bar/Border
    Automatically detect the borders of the video and the bars on the top, bottom, left, right sides, crop and delete the bars and borders.
  5. Max Width
    Scale video to the specified width, height will automatically use a value that maintains the aspect ratio of the input video.
  6. Max Height
    Scale video to the specified height, width will automatically use a value that maintains the aspect ratio of the input video.
  7. Aspect Ratio 16:9, 4:3, 1:1, 5:4, 4:5, 9:16
    Set the display aspect ratio for output video.
  8. Crop 16:9, 4:3, 1:1, 5:4, 4:5, 9:16
    Crop the input video to the specified aspect ratio, widescreen aspect ratio is 16:9 and standard aspect ratio is 4:3 (centered on the video frame).
  • If file upload process takes a very long time or no response or very slow, please try to cancel then submit again.
  • This tool cannot support encrypted or protected video files.

Quicktime 10 For Mac Convert From 4 3 To 16 9 Aspect Ratio Equation

Select other video tools according to your needs:

Quicktime 10 For Mac Convert From 4 3 To 16 9 Aspect Rational

  • Merge Video
    Video joiner to combine multiple video files
  • Cut Video
    Video cutter to split video files
  • Rotate Video
    Flip and transpose video
  • Watermark Video
    Add a watermark to video
  • Repair MP4
    Fix corrupted MP4, MOV, M4V, 3GP videos
  • Add Audio to Video
    Add or replace background music in videos
  • Change Video Speed
    Speed up or slow down video
  • Brighten Video
    Brighten and lighten a video
  • Stabilize Video
    Stabilize and deshake a shaky video




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