Forum Replies Created

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  • Colin Anderson

    March 7, 2013 at 4:08 pm in reply to: changes in Sony Vegas Pro 12?

    Maybe I’ll give it a try. Thanks.

  • Colin Anderson

    March 7, 2013 at 3:11 am in reply to: changes in Sony Vegas Pro 12?

    Well, unless I had a bug or faulty installs on 3 different machines for the past 2 years, I for one couldn’t apply Sony stabilizer on 32bit floating point, till the latest update. I could only do it in 8bit.

  • Colin Anderson

    March 7, 2013 at 3:08 am in reply to: changes in Sony Vegas Pro 12?

    You’re right, I was imagining things. I could have sworn I could mute everything but a single track with a single click. But I tried in Vegas 11 and I can’t. I gotta lay off the missus’s pills. 🙂

  • Colin Anderson

    April 19, 2012 at 12:01 am in reply to: Interlace artifacts after crop

    Yeah, I’ve noticed that too with interlace footage. It’s a pain in the a**. If scaling or using track motion with interlace footage in sony Vegas, use deinterlace in the project properties or render progressive with either Vegas’s deinterlace options or a third party deinterlace plugin as a media effect.

    If you’re using scaling or track motion only in a small portion of your footage, split it and render that clip with deinterlace enabled in the project properties, either Interpolate or Blend, which ever suits your footage, in a lossless AVI. Then drop that rendered clip back in your timeline where it belongs and disable deinterlace. That clip will still be interlaced.

  • Colin Anderson

    April 18, 2012 at 11:35 pm in reply to: Frame blending

    Best set it to none if you’re working with progressive footage. And set the field order to progressive.

  • Colin Anderson

    April 18, 2012 at 11:26 pm in reply to: Using Track Motion With/Vs. Zoom/Crop

    Perhaps I’m not grasping what you’re trying to do but the way I’m reading it is that you want the screen split in half and want to be able to move around from one side to the other. If that’s the case here’s one way you could do it.

    – Have two video tracks with one of the clips in each.
    – Resize each of the clip as desired so one occupies one side and the other clip the other side.
    – Render this in a lossless AVI file.
    -start a new project and drop the AVI file on the timeline.
    – Use track motion and keyframing to move across the screen as you please.

  • Colin Anderson

    March 21, 2012 at 3:35 pm in reply to: Error during batch render

    I’m using the script that came with Vegas, not a custom script. It appears to be something with my machine. Either a hardware or software issue because I tried it on my other system and it works flawlessly.

    This one got me puzzled.

  • Colin Anderson

    March 19, 2012 at 7:01 pm in reply to: Error during batch render

    Not that I can see. The whole timeline has the same project properties. I don’t know how to set audio tracks to different audio devices so whatever that is its been left to default. Besides, after rendering region 1, I deleted region 1 and ran the script again. It rendered region 2 successfully and gave me the same error. Deleted region 2 and ran the script again. It rendered region 3 successfully and gave me the error again and so on and so forth.

  • Colin Anderson

    July 28, 2011 at 6:19 pm in reply to: Flash animations and Vegas Pro

    Thanks John.

  • Colin Anderson

    July 4, 2011 at 9:55 pm in reply to: AVCHD 1080i – video effects and interlacing

    Hi John, thanks for replying.

    I set the deinterlace mode in the project properties along with the field order. I was under the impression that you only needed to deinterlace when you viewed the rendered footage on a progressive only display, like an LCD monitor. Thought I read that somewhere. But reading the passage in the Vegas manual again made me realize that it also tells Vegas how to render effects.

    Thanks

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