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Mark Lynch
March 16, 2011 at 10:20 pmI actually had the same idea, John, and just tried the Pro 10 Trial, same problem, choppy preview. No dice.
Danny, I just tried your method and it works wonderfully! Rather tedious having to render every clip before I can edit anything, but I’ll take it for the only HD format I have access to.
Thanks, guys!
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Mark Lynch
March 16, 2011 at 10:24 pmThough just to double check, when you say DV Widescreen, you mean AVI DV Widescreen, yes? I’ve been working remotely with other programs and standards lately and I just want to be sure, hah.
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John Rofrano
March 17, 2011 at 1:16 pm[Mark Lynch] “Rather tedious having to render every clip before I can edit anything, but I’ll take it for the only HD format I have access to. “
That’s why we build VASST GearShift. It does all of this tedious work for you. It will not only render the DV Widescreen proxies for you, but it will also swap back and forth between HD and SD whenever you want. You might want to download the free trial and see if it fits your workflow.
~jr
http://www.johnrofrano.com
http://www.vasst.com -
Mark Lynch
March 18, 2011 at 8:54 amI’ll post this here since I’m dealing with the same project.
I’ve done what you both suggested (VASST is nice, too) and it’s working great! But in the past hour, when I use a recently-DV-rendered clip and fade in/out of it with any other clip, the video becomes pixelated/choppy instead of fading, like so:
https://i55.tinypic.com/2d6jgjn.pngThis happens in the final product rendered video I tested with this, as well, not just the preview window. So this is a permanent problem. What is happening, and how can I fix it? Try re-rendering the recent clip?
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John Rofrano
March 18, 2011 at 1:03 pmThese are DV Widescreen clips that are causing this? And the clips look fine until you crossfade them? This is very strange. I’ve never seen this happen with DV before.
~jr
http://www.johnrofrano.com
http://www.vasst.com
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