I know the most common method is to scan the original movie tape. So that have to exists. But i dont know how much that cost.
It is possible to scan it up to 8k.
After that is done it is a matter of how much digital work one wants to do on them.
Earlier they used to go through the movie frame by frame to clean it up.
Now they let a computer to that. But someone has to watch it see to that it dont clean/remove something that should be there. Like what happen to the shoes in Alice in wonderland.
Mainstream movies like star wars or ET were probably filmed in HD from years back, like now, they are shooting in 8k or larger. The master copy can be remastered into better quality anytime.
can my older content, 720* footage, be remastered into HD?
Mainstream movies like star wars or ET were probably filmed in HD from years back, like now, they are shooting in 8k or larger. The master copy can be remastered into better quality anytime.
can my older content, 720* footage, be remastered into HD?
Much of the remastering that Hollywood does is based on there being a higher quality original available (shot on film but released on DVD, filmed in 1080 video but released on 720x480, etc). The remastering is recovering this detail that is available but not included on the original consumer product.
You can certainly bring 720*480 video in to a video editing program and export it to an HD frame size. The quality should probably be better than if you had a TV zoom the original footage (due to the better enlargement algorithms in the video editor). The quality obviously won't be as good as real HD.
Much of the remastering that Hollywood does is based on there being a higher quality original available (shot on film but released on DVD, filmed in 1080 video but released on 720x480, etc). The remastering is recovering this detail that is available but not included on the original consumer product.
You can certainly bring 720*480 video in to a video editing program and export it to an HD frame size. The quality should probably be better than if you had a TV zoom the original footage (due to the better enlargement algorithms in the video editor). The quality obviously won't be as good as real HD.
Exactly.
Instead of trying to enlarge it that big just step it up some. Adjust the colors, Make the over all screen size bigger to maybe the 9-- range and see how it looks. If it still looks good have another go and try it again.
Also the MP4 output might look the best so give that a run.
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