How to make HD 720p widescreen YouTube videos

HD is totally the new hotness right now. Everyone plus their moms is doing HD videos. True PRO INTERNET USERS are filling their YouTube accounts with vlogs talking about their inane failure at relationships, but now thanks to HD video on YouTube, you can see their acne pitting and armpit sweat stains where once you had only an active imagination and an inkling that their women problems might stem from possible personal hygiene issues. But now, you know for sure!

So you’re reading this because you clearly want to get in on the hot high def action, but probably aren’t sure how to go about it.

Alright, kiddos – it’s tutorial time. Doing HD 720p videos is actually super easy – you probably only need to change a couple things from the way you normally output your crappy videos. But it seems super gnarly because it uses a lot of new terminology – terminology that often gets misused by idiots so you just get more confused. People, especially the unwashed internet masses, misuse words and acronyms all the time, so it’s up to the ol’ F. Wong to cut a swath through the jungle of misappropriated terminology and give it to you straight.

First, we gotta clarify some terms.

What is an HD video?

HD stands for “high-definition” (and “hard drive” when you’re not talking about video and “Harley Davidson” when you’re not talking about nerd stuff). But to define high definition we need to first define definition so we have a baseline definition to base our definition of high definition on!

We should talk about the counterpart to HD, which is SD, or “standard definition.” SD video is the resolution (or how many pixels wide by how many pixels tall) of video that plays on a standard television set. What your regular ol’ DV camera shoots is also standard definition. The stuff you’ve uploaded to YouTube in the past is either SD or lower – 640×480 or 320×240 probably. That’s fine – but you want your videos to be HD now.

HD video comes in a few different flavors, but the one that YouTube supports and plays is 720p. 720p means 1280 pixels wide by 720 pixels tall. The “p” stands for “progressive” as in “progressive scan” which is more than you really need to know. If you care, keep reading here.

Here’s what you need to know: If you want to upload an HD video to YouTube, your video dimensions need to be 1280 pixels wide and 720 pixels tall. That’s it. The YouTube Upload Robots read the dimension of the image, and that lets them know to prepare the video so you can have the “Watch in HD” link at the bottom.

Here’s a comparison between HD and SD sizes – keep in mind it’s not full size:

sdvshd

Look at all that more explosion!

Why are there vertical black bars on both sides of my videos?

This has to do with a little thing called aspect ratio. 720p has a 16:9 aspect ratio. All that means is for every 16 pixels of width, you get 9 pixels of height. This is basically rectangular. Standard definition televisions, and all of the old content on YouTube has a 4:3 aspect ratio, which is basically square. So what happens when you put a square inside a rectangle? This does:

43169

See how the 4:3 image can’t fill everything up? That’s why the black vertical bars are there – to fill in the rest of the space.

What is bitrate?

In simple terms, think of bitrate as how much data is crammed in an amount of time. The common measurement is kbps, which stands for “kilobits per second.” What does this mean?

Here’s a quick rundown of the terms you should know. I’m not explaining this twice so read these line by line until you get it.

Bit – The smallest unit of measurement in computers. It is either a 1 or a 0. To use a money analogy, think of a penny. One cent. The smallest coin you’ll encounter in US currency.

Byte – The next step up. Random text files on your computer are probably in the size of bytes. One byte = 8 bits. (To continue the money analogy: it’s like how a dime is ten pennies)

Kilobyte – The next step up – for our purposes let’s just say a kilobyte is a thousand bites (kilo- being a prefix for “thousand” so a kilometer is a thousand meters, a kilogram is a thousand grams, and a Kiloman is a typo of a common soy sauce). If you want to be snarky, a kilobyte is actually equal to 1,024 bits, due to base-2 weirdness, but you didn’t come here to get nerdgasmed so we’re just going to say it’s about a thousand. The terrible JPEGs you download are in kilobytes.

Kilobit – Read this one again. Kilobit. A thousand bitsnot bytes. If you’re confused by this you shouldn’t be ashamed. I had to explain this quietly to a man whose job dealt with this difference (and who was, I might add, getting paid way the hell more than I was). THIS is what download speeds and kbps deals with – NOT! KILOBYTES PER SECOND. KILOBITS.

Which one is bigger? Kilobytes or kilobits? Well – a byte is eight bits. So a thousand bytes (a kilobyte) is equal to 1,000 times 8 bits in every byte, which means a kilobyte is about 8,000 bits. A kilobit is a 1,000 bits. So kilobytes are bigger – 8 times bigger in fact.

When acronymed, the difference is subtle – kbps is kilobits per second. kBps (notice the capital) is kilobytes per second. So when someone brags about their 512 kbps cable internet, that doesn’t mean they can download 500 kilobytes a second – it’s 512 kilobits per second, which (thanks to the power of math) means they’re downloading at about 62 kilobytes per second.

So now that the technical crap is out of the way, let’s talk about a hypothetical 30 second HD video we want to upload. What bitrate, or what kbps should we set it at? This depends. A high bitrate means that for every second of video, you’re cramming tons of data in it, which means it’ll look better but be a bigger file on your hard drive. A low bitrate means that for every second of video, you’re not putting as much data in it, which means it’ll look worse but be a smaller file on your hard drive.

In general, 3000 kbps is a good number to start with for HD video. If it needs to look better, bump it up to around 4000 kbps. If it’s too big a file, bring it down to about 2000 kbps.

Remember! Bitrate has nothing to do with dimensions – they measure different things. To have the HD option, YouTube is looking at your dimensions – how tall the image is versus how wide.

Alright how do I get a video up?

In whatever program you’re using, export your video at 1280 pixels x 720 pixels. Also, since you’re uploading your video to the internet and probably don’t want to sit there all day, you’re going to have to compress your file using a codec. Look for MPEG-2 (.mp2), MPEG-4 (.mp4), or h.264 as options – all are sleek modern compression schemes that YouTube happens to like. Keep in mind you might have to use a Custom export option in whatever program you’re using.

That’s really it!

YouTube’s guide is another decent reference.

What if I don’t want the side black bars on my video, but I only have a 4:3 image?

Compromises have to be made. You’re trying to turn a square into a rectangle. There are two ways you could do this. Some people streeeetch the square to fill in the sides. That tends to look kind of like ass, as you can see below:

stretch

Odds are you’ve seen this stretching before because most people with widescreen TVs playing back regular television (which is square) will have the image stretched to fill the frame. These people hardly deserve life itself, let alone their Walmart widescreen TVs. Don’t do this. If I come to your house and you’re doing this, I’m pissing in your sink because clearly you have neither taste nor regard for common decency.

The only real option you have (that is, if you don’t want me pissing in your sink) is cropping. You basically cut off the top parts of the image to make it 16:9 rectangular. It looks like this:

cropping

Notice here though that because we’re losing vertical resolution by cutting off the tops and bottoms, we’ve had to zoom in a little bit. But this way, you don’t get a distorted image.

I should add that if you have an HD camera, this won’t be an issue because HD is by definition 16:9 wide. This problem might come up if you’re recording, say, game video, or have SD footage you want to fill YouTube’s 16:9 frame. Most of the time, you can do this by reimporting your square video into your editing program, and set the project aspect ratio to 16:9. Then it’s a matter of positioning your original square video inside the rectangular frame, effectively cutting off the tops and bottoms.



45 Responses to “How to make HD 720p widescreen YouTube videos”

  1. Rocky says:

    Very helpful guide. :D

    Now I just need a camera…

  2. Steven says:

    Hey do I have to have a High-Definition camera to make the video HD?

  3. Taylor says:

    I think you have a little more time on your hands than most but anyway, my shirt doesnt fit, it makes me sad. Also, pretty nice guide, it’ll help.

  4. Ninja says:

    Can I use flv as a file extension? It makes the video easier to upload.

  5. Rob says:

    Hey, I was wondering what you need to do in Sony Vegas 8.0 to make it HD, because that’s where im having issues -_-”
    Thanks for any help in advance.

  6. Mark says:

    I cant get it to fit it records fine, but the goes all blury when i play it back.

    I am using HyperCam 2
    Windows movie maker.

    Get back to me pls, with some help, thanks, Mark.

  7. AK says:

    is it possible to make a video widescreen AFTER it has been put up?

  8. admin says:

    Unfortunately not – you can’t replace videos on YouTube

  9. Arrow816 says:

    Kinda True Kinda Not True. You can sort of replace videos, but it requires you to have to delete the video and then re upload the new video with the same name and same tags so people will find it again if they search for it.

  10. JJS says:

    if my camera cant capture widescreen, i can changed that with a video editting program and that will be ok?!
    won’t it look weird? stretched? (if thats even possible)

  11. logan says:

    you should do a tutorial for how to export from quicktime. i could use that.

  12. Breeder says:

    Minimum requirements for creating hd

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pGwCfONnnR4

  13. Princegoutham says:

    Hi

    I understood But is Mpg2 in 1280*720 or Mpg4 in 1280*720 which format is best i have seen that mpg2 takes more space than mpg4

  14. Princegoutham says:

    Ya now i reduced the bit rate in mpg2 and the sapce came down but which is best for HD given a Choice HD MPG2 r MPG4 i use home made videos which is in vob or vcd formate

  15. GRUTA says:

    I really like that video on youtube… when you shoot the vertical bars!
    great job!

  16. gb says:

    Thanks for the great explanation, which finally explained this to me after many previously failed attempts at loading HD.

    The only thing I’d make clearer is manually setting the kbps to 3000 or so. FCP, Imovie, and Quicktime always default to 672, so it’s necessary to manually make this change.

  17. gb says:

    Thanks for the great explanation, which finally explained this to me after many previously failed attempts at loading HD.

    The only thing I’d make clearer is manually setting the kbps to 3000 or so. FCP, Imovie, and Quicktime always default to 672, so it’s necessary to manually make this change (and the Youtube explanation site seems to say to leave the kbps rate alone).

    Thanks.

  18. 7up drinka says:

    What’s a good program for Windows to crop a video to 16:9?

  19. ninjamonky7 says:

    you rock

  20. Stephen says:

    Saw your vid on you tube that was funny

  21. rc says:

    SIGH, i don’t need a widescreen, just want my videos look clearer. i’m using a canon SD790IS to take videos and used to upload in higher quality in youtube; didn’t work since last week, all videos are regular (poor quality). the camera setting is in standard 640 X 240 only (not 1280 …..) can’t change higher one, using windows movie maker for editing which also reduce the quality. PLEASE PLEASE HELP, how can i upload the HQ videos with the limited sources. THANKS IN ADVANCE.
    BTW, very helpful information, least explain some of my queries. thanks again.

  22. terixscott says:

    alright
    so ive read this and im still lost
    i dont get how you compress it with codec or whatever and i dont even know its thats my problem
    but basically my videos upload and look like there suposed to be HD but it has black bars on the top and the side
    so it looks like it should fit the screen but it doesnt?

  23. admin says:

    What software are you using?

  24. Tristan says:

    Thanks for the tips bro!
    my videos have been looking crappy lately.
    does the same rules apply for
    Cyberlink PowerDirector?

  25. Esther says:

    All good! Video already in 1280 x 720 so just followed your advice to compress it and hey presto! HD widescreen video on YouTube. Thanks

  26. calob says:

    ok so i know how to put vids in full screen and i got 2 queastions 1: what did you use able to put a hd vid did dowload something from the internet or bought something 2: can your vids still be in hd if a camcorder is a hd or hdd camcorder without what you are using

  27. Kelvington says:

    Thanks for the tips! This is the first article that actually WORKS! I was able to do some testing and got some great results. Well done!
    —Kelvington

  28. Kah says:

    Help here!
    Just uploaded a reel made in after effects, exported the video with all the setting tips right… But youtube is taking almost a day prossesing it and i can’t watch it yet.
    Is it normal or there’s something wrong?
    Thanks

  29. timxirish says:

    Just wanted to say two things: 1) Very informative guide, and 2) You sir, are comedy gold as well as WIN ON THE INTERNETZ. That is RIGHT my good buddy! Internets… WITH A Z.

    Seriously man. YOU are a HERO.

  30. Thomas says:

    ok thanx for the 50 minute explanation of what HD means but I still don’t understand how to make the video wider and how to make the annoying black boxes vanish.

  31. moya says:

    dud already upload d video and its in 640×480 and it the video was took from my laptop and it was 640×480 anyway i can change dis? thx

  32. Twenty says:

    Nice guide to make HD videos of the computer screen. It also fits my needs to mare videos of my computer screen on YouTube.

  33. higles says:

    So I uploaded my video, which is 1280 x 720. But when it finishes uploading it doesn’t have the HD option. why is that?

  34. Calvin says:

    Wow, thanks! This really helped. Gives a really good description of some key terms in video making and tells you how to do it, straight to the point. Even gives an awesome example. Awesome flames!

  35. Calvin says:

    Oh yeah, for Vegas, you should be able to turn it into “Internet Video HQ” right when you make the project. When you’re done, you go to “Project” in the top left corner, go down to “Render As..”. On the right side of the window that pops up, click Custom. Another window pops up, at the bottom of it click Video, there’s a “Image Size” option there, go to High Quality 1280×720 and there you go.

  36. Lucy says:

    so helpful…but wud it work on windows movie maker???

  37. Reborn8 says:

    Very good guide. Well done indeed.

  38. fokozuynen says:

    What about if my video have upper and the down line black how i eliminate that.=

  39. Jessface says:

    Freddie, I’ve read this over and over. Doing that just makes me more of a n00b, but whatever, I still need help. Canon Powershot A640. Produces SDV. Windows Movie Maker, will make video from program HD, but not that actual video footage that comes from my camera; black bars still exist. How can I stretch the footage out like you say? Specific program? Anything? Help? ;A;

  40. Kyzer says:

    Fucking great vid man! thumbs up! been looking for something like this for ages

  41. Gabriel says:

    Ok, great, but you only writed about 640×480 (SD) and 1280×720 (HD), but I have a video in 1920×1080 (I’ve download it in blu ray quality), what can I do for upload it on youtube in maximum quality? Convert it in 1280×720?

  42. SkRaPp says:

    just did it worked first try thanks.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fHR–HUz7Xk
    only problem is that it loads a little slow

  43. Bluey says:

    Dude – you rock. You should be king of the internet.

  44. [...] primer video de 720p 11/28/2009 Y bien después de intentar una y otra vez subir un vídeo en HD de 720p por fin lo he conseguido y que mejor que el cierre de clases de la asignatura “Principios de [...]

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