I did not cut or stretch anything. This is the original screenshot from the movie being played in the playback program - a frozen movie (picture frame). It was captured in 720 x 576. I also wrote about it in another thread that I wonder why the picture in this recording is originally in 1.33: 1 (4: 3) when captured in 720 x 576. Where other material is e.g. in 1.25: 1... Probably what I wrote about here may matter: it could have been the signal recorded from a DVD to a VHS cassette.
Less on this subject.
I read somewhere that non-original proportions of the captured image can cause playback programs. That is, it looks like this on the computer screen, but in reality it is different.
Quote:
Originally Posted by sanlyn
The data at the bottom of the image is head-switching noise, present on all VHS captures.
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Since this strip at the bottom of the screen is head switching noise, so it was created when playing a VHS cassette through VCR ? Originally recorded movie on a VHS tape through a camera, so it probably did not have (this is not on the tape) this field ? Perhaps the VHS tape is really a good picture here (recorded on it), but when this is reproduced by the VCR, this blur is created there by switching the heads - at the very bottom of the read signal... ?
Maybe it was created (this strap) when years ago someone was installing(mount) a VHS cassette and then this strip was applied by the VCR during its recording - mounting.
But despite everything: was it even created at the very bottom of the original image (deforming it a little) or adding this new field automatically (stretching the image vertically)...?
In other words: Is this strip at the bottom of the screen is part of the original video recorded on the VHS tape (its aspect ratio - image format) or does this original image format (1.33:1) start from this strip up ?
Quote:
Originally Posted by sanlyn
If you don't know how to post unaltered images or samples directly from a video, please ask.
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I do not know how to do this.