Mark Prebonich
Forum Replies Created
-
Mark Prebonich
November 10, 2010 at 7:40 pm in reply to: Changing the color of one word in generated textJohn, would you mind going thru the steps of how to add the mask that you are referring to? Thanks.
-Mark
-
A little more info from one of the original clips. Hope this helps. I copied this from the media properties window.
Streams
Video: 00:01:25.811, 11.607 fps, 640x480x24, MPEG-4 Video
Audio: 00:01:25.811, 16,000 Hz, 16 Bit, Mono, µLaw 2:1 -
Bill, your advise was spot on. I now have one sharp looking video. Thank you very much for taking the time to help me out on this.
-Mark
-
I figured it out. Here is the clip:
-
I am using a Sony CX-500V camcorder and recorded this segment at 1920×1080-60i at 16 Mbps. I am attempting to include a clip demonstrating the finding. Any thoughts or suggestions would be appreciated. Thanks.
-Mark
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4SOtEy9VyT0 -
Another couple of questions:
Vegas help menu states: A 25 GB single-layer BD recordable disc can store approximately 3 hours, 42 minutes of AVC video (15 Mbps) or 2 hours, 15 minutes of MPEG-2 video (25 Mbps). Is there a noticable difference in quality between the two? If there is not much of a difference then why would one ever record AVCHD higher than 16 Mbps in the first place? Why does Vegas not allow one to do 24/25 Mbps AVC? Thanks again.
-Mark
-
Thanks for the reply.
‘I keep all my footage in the original format in case I need to further edit.’
Right, but if the original format is 24Mbps AVCHD, it looks like it is not possible to edit the video and then render back to the original format since Vegas does AVCHD via AVC file type and it only goes as high as 16 Mbps. So what is the best way to accomplish this? Thanks.
-Mark
-
Thanks for the reply Dave.
I also see that Vegas Pro only goes up to 16 Mbps in rendering with Sony AVC. This is what I have currently been using. It looks like I would need to render to MPEG-2 in order to render 1920×1080-60i at 25 Mbps. I don’t know enough about the different formats to know what this means. The file type that would be generated is .m2v which I am not familiar with. What would be the proper workflow for me in editing and rendering my home movies if I were to upgrade to a camera recording at 24 Mbps? Thanks.
-Mark
-
Now that my son is getting older and getting into some editing, he talked me into Sound Effects 6-10. I think the Seminar Series would have made most sense for me however. I may end up getting this for me anyways.
-Mark
-
When I preview clips, they just come up on the preview window anyways. I agree, using the timeline has seemed easier for me as well. I like having the additional real estate available by not having the trimmer window there.
-Mark