![]() ![]() That route is for the geeks or perfectionists but it really isn't so difficult as it might sound! ![]() Notice that the described procedure uses QuickTime Player Pro for the rotations, MPEG Streamclip for the scalings, and JES Deinterlacer for the interlacing stuff. The method described in the first link preserves interlacing in the rotated material (a special trick is needed for this), it doesn't crop the material (if the user doesn't want to) and it exactly preserves the aspect ratio when rotating rectangular pixel DV material in 90° increments. It also doesn't seem to preserve the correct aspect ratio when rotating rectangular pixels. It can't rotate the material without cropping. It doesn't properly work with interlaced input because also the interlacing lines are simply rotated and this doesn't look good on a TV! So you really should use only progressive material or deinterlace the input. There are some limitations with it, though: I tried it briefly and it seems nice and simple. Thanks for the tip about the free turn clip iMovie plug-in. ![]()
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