Hi Am Samstag, 13. Dezember 2003 23:20 schrieb [EMAIL PROTECTED]: > Hello. > > Is there any particular set of options > that works better for anime movies > when encoding for SVCD, giving good > quality while keeping the resulting > file as small as possible? Or animes > does not distinguish to other movies > when encoding? > > Regards. > > Romildo
Well, in my opinion there are differences. 1) In anime, you have no real true color. Additionaly, you have often "big" areas of the same color, with a sharp border to the next area (e.g. shadow on something). Here, I sometimes use yuvmedianfilter to eliminate possible "color noise". You can reduce the default radius of yuvmedianfilter to prevent smoothing of the images. 2) Motion: Often, in anime large areas of the scene do not change. However, there are areas/scenes with ... "motion abive any limit" (think e.g. about fights in DragonballZ. The characters move from one side of the screen to another in just a few frames). Thats why I sometimes extend the motion estimation radius (-r) even to the max of 32. However, some players can have problems with this (as I have read), and it really slows down the encoding. Maybe the others have additional tips. For some Windows app (i don't remember the name), there is even a special anime filter, thus some people have already spent thinking about this. Adrian ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.net email is sponsored by: IBM Linux Tutorials. Become an expert in LINUX or just sharpen your skills. Sign up for IBM's Free Linux Tutorials. Learn everything from the bash shell to sys admin. Click now! http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id=1278&alloc_id=3371&op=click _______________________________________________ Mjpeg-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/mjpeg-users