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-   -   Ulead® VideoStudio™ 11 Plus "Thoughts"? (http://www.tvpast.org/forum/video-tech/6519-ulead-videostudio-11-a.html)

JonathanEntertainment 07-26-2007 01:10 PM

Ulead® VideoStudio™ 11 Plus "Thoughts"?
 
Does anyone use this??? supposibly does alot more in menu design..like transitions.

http://www.ulead.com/vs/features.htm

JE

lordsmurf 07-26-2007 01:21 PM

It's not as advanced as Ulead DVD Workshop.

It's the Ulead answer to newbie-ware like Apple iMovie and Sonic MyDVD. It might try to re-encode your video and have all other kinds of newbie-ware types of issues.

DVDWS2 does transitions. Ever seen my Johnny Bravo set? I just did something basic with him turning the knob, but it can be far more complex if you want to spend the time on it.

You still have to create the transitions in an NLE.



JonathanEntertainment 07-27-2007 10:39 AM

No I havent seen the Johnny Bravo but hate to sound Dumb... but what does NLE Stand for?

lordsmurf 07-27-2007 11:13 AM

NLE = non-linear editor. Adobe Premiere, Sony Vegas, Apple Final Cut Pro, Avid

JonathanEntertainment 07-28-2007 09:33 AM

ok cool but what would I need to do to take it from the editor like is there a specific file type? and how would I add the transition to the menu?

lordsmurf 07-28-2007 10:00 AM

A menu uses a normal MPEG-2 just like the DVD does.

My X-MEN menus, for example, are video clips from the X-MEN series. Many DVD authoring programs require progressive video on menus, not interlaced, so you have to IVTC your interlaced video in advance. I did it in TMPGEnc Plus. I encoded new progressive MPEG-2 files. Because NLEs work best with low/uncompressed AVI files, I used VirtualDub to convert the MPEG-2 videos into uncompressed AVI files. Those videos were imported into Adobe Premiere, an NLE. I added some Adobe Photoshop PSD files with alpha layers to create the motion menu. The clips were edited into a new menu. The only thing I did in the authoring program was added the little red "X" buttons on top of the video.

Authoring applications do not "make menus" but rather assemble what you give it. In this case, for a full motion menu, you need to give it a video clip ready to use. There are other ways for simpler types of motion (thumbnail motion, for example, like my JLU ... or background motion only, such as the homemade Ducktales 20-disc). But of course, those don't look as good.

Something like Ulead VS is not made for tv show collectors. That's a piece of software a soccer mom uses to create a simple DVD from her DV camera video of little Timmy's baseball game. It makes assumptions about your source material. It's not made for TV recordings. My method is good for any source, and I mostly do VHS transfers and TV show recordings.


JonathanEntertainment 07-30-2007 01:42 AM

Ok thanks I was just curious as I just ran across the name of this software and noticed that it said can do transitions for menus and that is why I asked if anyone had used it or wether it was good. Thank you for the info I dont think I will trade up on DVDWS2! lol


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