However, converting a VOB using the workflow will result in a loss of audio. I can't find any preferences in QTP to use a different color profile or anything like that.Filters are found in the QTP "Movie to QuickTime" options window area. In any case, using MPEG Streamclip allows you to adjust brightness, contrast, saturation, and volume during conversion processing if you desire.
In fact, it doesn't look so much as a "darkening" as a slight translucency of the movie over a black background that tends to accentuate variations in light and shadow. Quicktime Player is playing the exact same movie files darker than VLC Player.I can hardly notice the difference on my monitor. MPEG Streamclip (free) (requires the $19.99 QT MPEG-2 component) here. Nobody responded, but I think I've got a workflow I'm reasonably happy with (Macthe Ripper to extract the VBO and ffmpeg to reencode).I prefer In fact, it may have even been darker still, though I didn't bother to prove that to myself. I also tried playing the movies via iTunes.
Notice the cream colored door is more gray in QTP.Īt first I thought it was a side effect of the encoding process, but then I realized that even if I use the master video file before re-encoding it, it's still too dark in QTP. I can't find any preferences in QTP to use a different color profile or anything like that.Īnd this isn't just a darkness issue, the color also seems to be worse as well. I have noticed this on two different machines, so it's not a fluke. So basically any movie I play on this same exact machine, but using the two different players, QTP is too dark. Quicktime Player is playing the exact same movie files darker than VLC Player. Nobody responded, but I think I've got a workflow I'm reasonably happy with (Macthe Ripper to extract the VBO and ffmpeg to reencode). Per this thread, I have been trying to find the perfect way to rip DVDs in preparation for iTV: This is about Quicktime Player playing movies much darker than VLC. No, this isn't another thread about Mac vs.