header
Results 1 to 9 of 9

Thread: File format

Share this Thread!
  1. #1
    CG Cars Junior Member
    Autodesk 3D Studio Max Mental Ray
    Status : Offline
    Join Date: Jul 2005
    Location: UK
    Posts: 239
    Images: 1

    File format

    Hi

    Do you know which format is best to save rendered animations as (.avi, etc)? and which codec? I have tried saving as avi with standard microsoft codec and it comes out really bad quality.

    What settings do you use?

    Thanks


  2. #2
    CG Cars Junior Member
    Status : Offline
    Join Date: May 2006
    Posts: 124
    i use avi with Divx codec (with best quality option). Looks great for me.


  3. #3
    CG Cars Member
    Autodesk Maya Dassault SolidWorks Mental Ray
    Status : Offline
    Join Date: Nov 2005
    Location: Melbourne Australia
    Posts: 1,037
    most professional people dont recomend avi since it can reach a very high mb. Most people use mov (quicktime).
    Check these thread out for more info.
    http://forums.cgsociety.org/search.php?searchid=3956144
    http://forums.cgsociety.org/showthre...highlight=.avi


  4. #4
    CG Cars Junior Member
    Autodesk 3D Studio Max Mental Ray
    Status : Offline
    Join Date: Jul 2005
    Location: UK
    Posts: 239
    Images: 1
    great thanks for the links and info, I'll try it out Click here to enlarge


  5. #5
    CG Cars Member
    Autodesk 3D Studio Max Rhinoceros Chaosgroup V-Ray
    Status : Offline
    Join Date: Oct 2005
    Posts: 2,452
    Does AVI issue applies to maya only? I didn't have problem with 3ds max.
    Finished Work - Aston Martn DBS


  6. #6
    CG Cars Member
    Autodesk Maya Dassault SolidWorks Mental Ray
    Status : Offline
    Join Date: Nov 2005
    Location: Melbourne Australia
    Posts: 1,037
    Its all the same because with avi they all have the same quality, but when you a long reel, it would become very big in size. also when using it in high quality, mov is the best because it has comperssion rates and more freedom. Because avi dosent have comppresion.


  7. #7
    CG Cars Junior Member
    Status : Offline
    Join Date: Oct 2005
    Posts: 42
    Click here to enlarge Originally Posted by et_fone_home
    Its all the same because with avi they all have the same quality, but when you a long reel, it would become very big in size. also when using it in high quality, mov is the best because it has comperssion rates and more freedom. Because avi dosent have comppresion.
    Maya or Max shpuld have nothing to do with a video format! The best you can do is render all frames into an uncompressed image format and convert later to whatever format and with whatever compression and codec you need.

    To make it clear avi is just a container. There are a lot of different codecs and compression algorithm that use the avi container.

    Please dig a little deeper into such a technical topic before you post.


  8. #8
    CG Cars Member
    Status : Offline
    Join Date: Jul 2005
    Posts: 1,247
    Images: 2
    Why not render all frames into .tiff.. uncompressed. Then load it into Video editing program (eg. Adobe premiere pro 2.0) And then putt it all together and then compress it. I think this is a better solution.


    Just my 0.02 cents



    //edit whoopsie, Crea said it before me.. My bad sorry


  9. #9
    CG Cars Junior Member
    Status : Offline
    Join Date: Jul 2005
    Posts: 172
    Images: 1
    hi,
    you can also render every single frame, and combine the frames with virtual dub, if you have installed e.g. divx 5.02 you can use this codec, i think its really good
    here you can find virtual dub
    virtualdub.sourceforge.net/

    ciao dan

    P.S. as Ravens said, you should render the frames in tiff, format its a common file format for video and postproduction


Closed Thread

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

     

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
Sections

Frontpage

Community

Blogs

Gallery

Store
Community

Forum

Spotlights

Specials

Contests

Job Offers
Company

About CGCars

Contact Us

Advertise

Media Kit

Imprint
Social Network

RSS Feed

Facebook

Twitter



Contact | Imprint | Privacy
Admin Mod Archiv Top