#1  
02-04-2026, 03:36 PM
spcascade spcascade is offline
Premium Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2026
Location: West Vancouver BC
Posts: 3
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
Hi . . I am transferring super 8 film using a Wolverine machine and when converting to quick time movie (I am a Mac user) through mpeg streamclip . . have a couple of questions on the settings on using streamclip. I set it at apple Pro Rez 422 at 100% at 720x480 and apparently should not use the 'frame blending' setting but use 'better downscaling'. What about interlace or de-interlace settings?
thanks
Craig McDowall
Reply With Quote
Someday, 12:01 PM
admin's Avatar
Ads / Sponsors
 
Join Date: ∞
Posts: 42
Thanks: ∞
Thanked 42 Times in 42 Posts
  #2  
02-05-2026, 12:39 AM
lordsmurf's Avatar
lordsmurf lordsmurf is offline
Site Staff | Video
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Posts: 15,476
Thanked 2,834 Times in 2,403 Posts
Those Wolverine scans always look so awful.

No, never a frame blend. Not for nothing, nowhere, never. (Quadruple negative on purpose! )

ProRes422, 720x480 -- what is the frame rate? Does it match the Wolverine scanner?

Film has no interlace.
Film is progressive, meaning "one after the other", which is what film does. One frame, then the next, and the next, etc, thousands of them.

Wolverines don't have great resolution, and I believe that interpolate as well. So if it downscales, it's not much much.

I've not used MPEG Streamclip in years. I know it has some non-core utilities, maybe even non-compression (non-MPEG), but I'm not certain. I'd hate to import file, compress it to MPEG (bitrate constrained, GOP, 4:2:0), then extract back to ProRes422. So you need to verify all that.

Why not use iMovie or FCP for such importing?

PS- Too bad that rotten scanner shares a name with one of the best Marvel characters.

- Did my advice help you? Then become a Premium Member and support this site.
- For sale in the marketplace: TBCs, workflows, capture cards, VCRs
Reply With Quote
  #3  
02-05-2026, 10:15 AM
spcascade spcascade is offline
Premium Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2026
Location: West Vancouver BC
Posts: 3
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
I would still have to convert the film using Wolverine to make .mov but you are saying just directly import to fcp 7 rather than go thru mpeg streamclip? Appreciate the help

Craig'
Reply With Quote
  #4  
02-08-2026, 10:00 AM
lordsmurf's Avatar
lordsmurf lordsmurf is offline
Site Staff | Video
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Posts: 15,476
Thanked 2,834 Times in 2,403 Posts
Yes, I would look to direct import FCP, bypassing MPEG Streamclip.

- Did my advice help you? Then become a Premium Member and support this site.
- For sale in the marketplace: TBCs, workflows, capture cards, VCRs
Reply With Quote
The following users thank lordsmurf for this useful post: spcascade (02-09-2026)
  #5  
02-09-2026, 10:51 AM
spcascade spcascade is offline
Premium Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2026
Location: West Vancouver BC
Posts: 3
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
Thanks again for your guidance

Craig
Reply With Quote
  #6  
02-11-2026, 03:43 PM
vwestlife vwestlife is offline
Free Member
 
Join Date: May 2024
Location: New Jersey, USA
Posts: 192
Thanked 35 Times in 31 Posts
Generally in QuickTime 10.x, you can open a video file, and then choose "Save as", and it'll rewrap the video into a .MOV container file without re-encoding it.
Reply With Quote
Reply




Tags
mppeg streamclip

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
How to get Quicktime files of 8mm film onto DVDs ? kcmom Project Planning, Workflows 32 09-03-2012 01:01 AM
Good transfer houses for transferring 8mm/Super 8 film to digital ? wstrib Project Planning, Workflows 1 02-01-2012 03:44 AM
Transferring 8mm/Super 8 film to digital formats? Who to use? lordsmurf Capture, Record, Transfer 2 11-26-2010 06:45 PM
Extracting a quicktime film from a large data file Tranzor Computers 3 07-14-2006 10:02 AM

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search



 
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 01:45 AM