4.2
Table Of Contents
Retiming Quality: This pop-up menu sets the retiming method.
There are four options:
Fast (Nearest Frame): Uses a copy of the nearest available
frame to fill the new in-between frames.
Better (Motion Adaptive): Uses on areas of
the source file that contain movement to produce good-
quality output.
Best (Motion Compensated): Uses deinterlacing on areas
of the source file that contain movement to produce high-
quality output.
Reverse Telecine: Removes the extra fields added during
the telecine process to convert the film’s 24 fps to NTSC’s
29.97 fps. Choosing this item disables all the other Quality
controls. For more information, see .
Adaptive details: Select this checkbox to use advanced image
analysis to distinguish between noise and edge areas during
output.
Anti-aliasing level: Sets the softness level in the output image.
Double-click the value and then manually enter a new value or
drag the slider to the right to increase softness. This property
improves the quality of conversions when you’re scaling media
up. For example, when transcoding SD video to HD, anti-
aliasing smooths jagged edges that might appear in the image.
Details level: Sets the amount of detail in the output image.
Double-click the value and then manually enter a new value or
drag the slider to set the value. This sharpening control lets
you add detail back to an image being enlarged. Unlike other
sharpening operations, the “Details level” property
distinguishes between noise and feature details, and generally
deinterlacing
About reverse telecine










