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Home / Learning Center / Camtasia Studio / 6 / FAQ / Understanding Dimensions, etc. Camtasia Studio 6 Tutorial:Understanding Dimensions, Project Settings and Aspect RatioHave you ever made a video with black bars or one that appeared squashed or stretched? (Yes! I’m in that situation now! Is there anything I can do to recover so I don’t have to start completely over? You may be in luck. Try these two strategies.) If this happened to you it probably went something like this: You recorded a window, maybe some region, or maybe the full screen. You clicked through the Project Settings dialog, made your edits, and when you produced and watched your video, it didn’t look quite like you thought it would. What should you do so that doesn’t happen next time? Well, it may sound strange, but before you ever click the Record button, you really need to start…at the end. Where will your final video be viewed? You see, Camtasia Studio didn’t make “the rules”, but over time two standard aspect ratios have emerged, 4:3 and more recently (at least for the home LCD & plasma widescreen TVs) 16:9. The 4:3 ratio means for every 4 pixels in width, there are 3 pixels in height. Similarly, the 16:9 ratio means 16 pixels in width for every 9 in height. If your video doesn’t conform to these standards, one of three things will happen:
How do I avoid this? First we recommend picking an aspect ratio. You can’t really have it both ways. The “default” way used to always be 4:3, but now all the cool kids are making 16:9 videos, and sites like Hulu, Google Video, and YouTube support 16:9 which is also sometimes referred to as wide screen or HD (high definition). Here’s a list with popular dimensions at each aspect ratio. Standard, 4:3 (width:height) Popular dimensions include: 320x240, 640x480, 800x600, 1024x768 Widescreen, 16:9 (width:height) Popular dimensions include: 640x360, 800x450, 960x540, 1024x576, 1280x720, and 1920x1080 We’re almost done. But there’s one last trick—if you know your finished video will be 640x480, it DOES NOT mean that you have to record at 640x480. In fact—you SHOULDN’T record at 640x480! What?!? Think of it this way. If you shrink down a web browser window to fit in a 640x480 area, your viewers will likely have a hard time seeing some of the text and details. Plus, you will have to scroll a lot to show things. A more extreme case would be if you knew you wanted people to watch the video on an iPhone so you recorded at the tiny 480x320. What’s the solution? You want to record at the same aspect ratio as 640x480. This is a 4:3 aspect ratio so for every 4 pixels wide, there are 3 pixels in height. As long as we record at something like 1024 x 768 (also 4:3), it’ll scale down perfectly and we’ll use Camtasia Studio to zoom in on the parts we want the viewer to see!
To configure Camtasia Recorder to record at a specific aspect ratio:
Fix a Video that Already has Messed Up DimensionsWe recommend trying two things: Host Video on Screencast.com or Rescale Video using Zoom and Pan Host Your Video on Screencast.comYou can convert your video to its original recording dimensions. You can then produce at these dimensions and publish to Screencast.com. The reason Screencast.com is important here is because it does not alter your dimensions. As an analogy, if you upload to YouTube or your video is played in most other players, it’ll have to conform to some size “box”. If the video doesn’t fit nicely, you’ll either get black bars or scaling. Screencast.com has a hands-off policy so your super tall, super skinny video will look tall and skinny on Screencast.com too. To revert to original recording dimensions:
IMPORTANT: Double-check your video. When you change dimensions after editing, it’s likely your callouts may now be misaligned or way too big or small, zoom and pans may be “off”, and so on. Rescale Video using Zoom and PanOne way you can recover from a video with black bars is to use Camtasia Studio’s “Snap to video edges” feature or manually apply Zoom-n-Pan keyframes. To apply snap to video edges:
Manually apply Zoom-n-Pan KeyframesIf Snap to video edges yields unsatisfactory results, you can manually apply Zoom-n-Pan keyframes. This might be especially necessary if you have multiple clips in your video at varying dimensions, as a “one-size-fits-all” approach may not work. You will be leveraging the “Pan” part of the feature as you show the viewer a part of your screen that conforms to standard dimensions. Tip: You can make that green “Zoom hint” rectangle disappear for the viewer by clicking Tools > Options > Zoom (tab). Then uncheck the Apply Zoom-n-Pan hints checkbox. To manually apply Zoom-n-Pan keyframes:
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