Internet speeds were so slow HD video was a real problem.ġ280 x 720 is still optimal to a shrinking audience of people. Original I-phones were low resolution, laptops were all low resolution, even desktops had low res screens. If you limit zooming to 200% the blurring should not be to bad.Zooming should only be applied long enough to show a small detail that would be hard to see normally.Then removed so the video comes back into focus.ġ280 x 720 is becoming more of an old school optimal dimension for sharing. If you change "Any" of the dimensions of the video you will lose clarity. In your case it sounds like 1920 x 1080 applies. You want to record, edit and produce your video at the same dimensions. Or maybe you should consider taking High Resolution Still screen shots and inserting them as a "Picture in Picture" or Picture slide show instead?
#PROJECT CANVAS FULL#
In Short, if you plan on being zoomed into the video, more than zoomed out to full screen. Which isn't blurry because it's being returned closer to it's original recorded dimension. So, even though the image appears larger on the canvas/screen, it's actually closer to it's original size.
When you zoom in "Up until a certain Point" pixels are put back where they belong. SO, that's why the zoom work's in your favor.
Some content will look much better than other content will. Pixels are discarded initially to make the video fit.How good the video looks after that transformation takes place is dependent on the actual content. This will have a negative effect on the original videos quality the entire time zoom is not applied. What happens is you would start by Squishing the 1920 x 1080 video into a 1280 x 720 space. If you record at 1920 X 1080 then set the project dimensions to a lower HD (1280 X 720). What your describing is a matter of taste.