On Wed, 28 Jan 2004, E.Chalaron wrote: > Yes if the movie was shot at 24 fps which is not always the case...... Super
Pity we're stuck with 24fps for film - interesting how that came to be "the standard" (from eons ago but we're stuck with it now). > 8 mm, 8 mm are very often at 18 fps.... If you reshoot each frame > individually in a telecine machine as ppm files to an mpeg2 file then you and I thought the usual way that was done was to project the movie onto a screen or similar and capture at the desire rate (there are boxes made for that I believe) rather than processing individual frame scans. > I will have to modify the speed under kino or something ......... There's yuvfps but I do not know if that will work or not for what you're doing. > > So things like 20 or 18 are NOT legal MPEG-2 (besides which they > > can't be produced by mpeg2enc ;)). > > Then it resolves everything ! I need extra frames........ Yes, that's what you need. I can't think of any way around the need for extra frames. Good Luck! Cheers, Steven Schultz ------------------------------------------------------- The SF.Net email is sponsored by EclipseCon 2004 Premiere Conference on Open Tools Development and Integration See the breadth of Eclipse activity. February 3-5 in Anaheim, CA. http://www.eclipsecon.org/osdn _______________________________________________ Mjpeg-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/mjpeg-users