![]() but I have read online that with Toast one could make a very good quality DVD. What am I doing wrong? I am surprised I have had nearly the same results with both iDVD and Toast, and am wondering if the drop-off in quality from HD to SD is just what I should expect. The Toast settings I used were "Best." I left everything else on default. I just finished making a DVD of this movie on Toast 11 Pro and the quality is about the same, perhaps slightly better, than the iDVD-made DVD - but it still looks like a cheap camcorder. ![]() said the resulting DVD would be better than what I experienced with iDVD. Because I am also interested in possibly putting this movie onto Blu-ray, I began looking into Toast and the sales rep. It looks like, played on a HD TV via a standard DVD player, almost like it was shot on a $99 camcorder. I understand and am aware that DVDs are SD, so there will be some video quality drop-off, but I was quite disappointed in the resulting DVD. I then wanted to get the movie onto DVD and went with iDVD. ![]() I exported the 80 minute movie as a quicktime movie (NO conversion), self-contained, and the resulting MOV file (58 GB) plays and looks great on several computers. The audio files in the sequence are 48 khz and 16 bit.Īll footage is HDV 1080i from a Sony HVR-A1U I am brand new to Toast (Just purchased 11Pro about 3 days ago, never owned a previous version) and fairly new to movie-making in general, so I have what will probably prove to be some simple questions.
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