I have a set of video frames saved as images in a directory, and I'm trying to encode these to a good quality video, however every setting and every format I try produces very noticeable artifacts.
The basic command is this:
ffmpeg -r 25 -i %4d.png myvideo.mpg
and I've tried the minrate and maxrate flags. Any of {mpg, avi, mov, flv} formats will do.
Any suggestions for settings? Final file size is not an issue.
Unless you do some kind of post-processing work, the video will never be better than the original frames. Also just like a flip-book, if you have a big "jump" between keyframes it will look funny. You generally need enough "tweens" in between the keyframes to give smooth animation. HTH
A couple of things:
You need to set the video bitrate. I have never used minrate and maxrate so I don't know how exactly they work, but by setting the bitrate using the
-b
switch, I am able to get high quality video. You need to come up with a bitrate that offers a good tradeoff between compression and video quality. You may have to experiment with this because it all depends on the frame size, frame rate and the amount of motion in the content of your video. Keep in mind that DVD tends to be around 4-5 Mbit/s on average for 720x480, so I usually start from there and decide whether I need more or less and then just experiment. For example, you could add-b 5000k
to the command line to get more or less DVD video bitrate.You need to specify a video codec. If you don't, ffmpeg will default to MPEG-1 which is quite old and does not provide near the amount of compression as MPEG-4 or H.264. If your ffmpeg version is built with libx264 support, you can specify
-vcodec libx264
as part of the command line. Otherwise-vcodec mpeg4
will also do a better job than MPEG-1, but not as well as x264.There are a lot of other advanced options that will help you squeeze out the best quality at the lowest bitrates. Take a look here for some examples.
You need to specify the -vb option to increase the video bitrate, otherwise you get the default which produces smaller videos but with more artifacts.
Try something like this:
ffmpeg -r 25 -i %4d.png -vb 20M myvideo.mpg
Make sure the PNGs are fully opaque before creating the video
e.g. with imagemagick, give them a black background:
From my tests, no bitrate or codec is sufficient to make the video look good if you feed ffmpeg PNGs with transparency