Just want to make a Christmas DVD!! Help!!

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  • vfd265
    Junior Member
    Junior Member
    • May 2008
    • 2

    Just want to make a Christmas DVD!! Help!!

    I searched, scoured and browsed the forum for answers, only to become more confused than I was when I started. I am new to digital video, but consider myself fairly computer literate. However, all this formatting, codecs and compression talk is making my head spin. Now to the root of the problem.

    I have 2 Christmas videos that I recorded on Mini-DV and would LOVE to turn them into DVD's. I transferred the video to my PC, using Windows Movie Maker. I save them as AVI, it was the best qaulity choice and I figured that was the way to go? I edited the videos, adding a few transitions and titles.

    My question is how do I get these to DVD from Windows Movie Maker without losing quality? Also, would a different program be better to use? I am not making professional quality movies, just want to archive my home movies.

    Any help would be appreciated, and remember I know next to nothing about digital video.

    Thanks1
  • Chewy
    Super Moderator
    • Nov 2003
    • 18971

    #2
    Talk about DVD Flick, a free software to convert your AVI/DivX/XviD files to DVD


    I reccomend this free program for beginners

    Play around with it to convert to dvd compliant mpeg2 files that you can later burn to dvd

    you do have a dvd burner right?

    Comment

    • vfd265
      Junior Member
      Junior Member
      • May 2008
      • 2

      #3
      Yes I do have a DVD burner, no offense taken, It is a legit question....lol.

      As a further note, the files I already stored on my computer were AVI....each one is 10-11 gigs.

      Comment

      • Chewy
        Super Moderator
        • Nov 2003
        • 18971

        #4
        Well this is rocket science and no one can lead you thru it, it takes a while to get it right

        I would have kept my avi file size down to about 700MB/hr of video since hard drive space can become a premium and unless you are capturing home video in high def the extra size won't help, it only helps an older computer keep up by not having to compress

        Comment

        • paglamon
          Lord of Digital Video
          Lord of Digital Video
          • Aug 2005
          • 2126

          #5
          @vfd265
          Did you try the software that Chewy mentioned in his earlier post ?

          @Chewy
          His is a MiniDV camcorder.Transferred via Firewire will always give him DV-AVI,which is about 13 GB per hour. Why should he compress that ? The conversion from DV-AVI to DVD will itself entail compression.It is better not to compress before the conversion.
          sigpic

          ONLY MOMENTS LINGER...DEWDROPS ON A FALLEN LEAF

          Comment

          • Chewy
            Super Moderator
            • Nov 2003
            • 18971

            #6
            A friend does it both ways, we can't tell any difference except the uncompressed avi wastes a lot of space. Moviemaker allows you the choice.

            Comment

            • paglamon
              Lord of Digital Video
              Lord of Digital Video
              • Aug 2005
              • 2126

              #7
              uncompressed avi
              DV-AVI is not uncompressed. It has bitrate of about 25 Mbps. Uncompressed avi is about 9 times that size.
              sigpic

              ONLY MOMENTS LINGER...DEWDROPS ON A FALLEN LEAF

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              • Chewy
                Super Moderator
                • Nov 2003
                • 18971

                #8
                My friend only has an 120 gig hard drive which is already close to full, his amd 2400 handles the firewire capture and compression less than a gig an hour without problems or quality loss, why would he want to keep a 13 gig one hour avi?

                I have heard this for years but i think it's a holdover from when computers couldn't handle the compression in real time

                Comment

                • paglamon
                  Lord of Digital Video
                  Lord of Digital Video
                  • Aug 2005
                  • 2126

                  #9
                  Sorry Chewy. I disagree. Hardware that can support real time capture and compression without frame drops should cost much more than adding a few hundred Gigs of HD. Secondly, the OP does some editing on his captured/transferred video. It is accepted that DV-AVI is better editable than mpg.
                  I still feel that prior to editing the video should be as little compressed as practically possible. Anyone interested in video editing MUST have a dedicated HD for that only. But then,everyone has his/her preferences.
                  sigpic

                  ONLY MOMENTS LINGER...DEWDROPS ON A FALLEN LEAF

                  Comment

                  • Chewy
                    Super Moderator
                    • Nov 2003
                    • 18971

                    #10
                    Hardware that can support real time capture and compression without frame drops
                    his amd 2400 and 512 megs of ram has been doing it for 2 years, never dropped a frame

                    I tried to convince him about the extra hard drive, he said no need

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