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Though a growing number of home viewers are accepting letterboxing, most people still favor the square television image.
Letterboxing is an outdoor hobby that combines elements of orienteering, art, and puzzle solving.
Letterboxing is another treasure hunt game.
"How Letterboxing Works" 27 June 2007.
Letterboxing (filming)
Letterboxing may refer to:
When converted to a 16:9 frame, there is slight pillarboxing, while conversion to 4:3 creates slight letterboxing.
The "PFX count" is not a term associated with Dartmoor Letterboxing.
Letterboxing is used as an alternative to a full-screen, pan-and-scan transfer of a widescreen film image to videotape or videodisc.
If a recording is said to be letterboxed, that implies that the letterboxing was done prior to fixing the recording on the medium.
A number of games also support a video display ratio of up to 16:9 using either Anamorphic widescreen or Letterboxing.
True, shows like "I Love Lucy" or "Cheers" will require the aforementioned vertical letterboxing when viewed on high-definition television sets.
Pillarboxing is the vertical equivalent of letterboxing and is sometimes called reverse letterboxing.
Letterboxing is the practice of transferring film shot in a widescreen aspect ratio to standard-width video formats while preserving the film's original aspect ratio.
How Letterboxing Works More than 150 years ago, an Englishman in Dartmoor inadvertently inspired a hobby that today has thousands of people playing along: letterboxing.
Additionally, both NTSC and PAL N64 systems run the game in full screen, without the "letterboxing" seen in many PAL releases, and there is a 16:9 option for use on widescreen televisions.
Janet Palmer has writtern a brief guide to Dartmoor Letterboxing: Let's Go Letterboxing: A Beginner's Guide (2nd revised edition) ISBN 1-898964-33-5.
Letterboxing has become a popular sport, with thousands of walkers gathering for 'box-hunts' and while in some areas of Dartmoor it is particularly popular amongst children, some of the more difficult to find boxes and tougher terrain are better suited to more experienced adults.
Beginning with the Red vs. Blue: Out of Mind mini-series, Rooster Teeth began to film and edit video in 720p high-definition, and to release episodes in widescreen format, instead of hiding the game HUD through the letterboxing seen in full-screen releases.
As a sidenote, if a purely non-widescreen version of the analog-anamorphic Star Wars were to be released on DVD, the only options would be pan-and-scan or hardcoded 4:3 letterboxing (with the black letterboxes actually encoded as part of the DVD data).