Comments

Musicvid wrote on 12/25/2018, 12:51 PM

https://www.vegascreativesoftware.info/us/forum/faq-how-to-post-mediainfo-and-vegas-pro-file-properties--104561/

There is a learning curve with this software. Don't expect to understand it all this week.

 

john_dennis wrote on 12/25/2018, 1:49 PM

Most HD delivery formats and thus, render templates, are 16:9 aspect ratio. You can expect to have black bars top and bottom with 16:9 media on a 16:10 monitor. Tell us what you are trying to achieve. 

Handy background information.

BlackScreenMan2020 wrote on 12/26/2018, 6:03 AM

so if you look at this video:

When im in the game there are no black bars but i have the same monitor

then at the uninstall part i have black bars but the same monitor? can someone atleast explain why it is like this?

Former user wrote on 12/26/2018, 6:34 AM

Your output settings in rendering have to be the same as your input project. If you have a project set to 1680x1050, at the time of rendering you have to render in that same proportion choosing this ratio in Custom Frame Size in the chosen rendering template.

BlackScreenMan2020 wrote on 12/26/2018, 7:32 AM

I have but that aint helping

john_dennis wrote on 12/26/2018, 10:53 AM

Provide C from this FAQ.

Red Prince wrote on 12/26/2018, 6:38 PM

so if you look at this video:

When you look at it and click the HD icon on YouTube, it tells you it is a 1080p60 video. 1080p means 1920x1080, which is 16:9, a standard ratio. And since you are watching it on a 16:10 monitor, you see the black bars, while those of us using a standard 16:9 monitor do not see any black bars. Which is exactly what John Dennis has told you.

So, if you truly recorded and edited it in the 16:10 ratio, apparently YouTube re-sampled it to the standard 16:9 ratio, and there is nothing you can do about it because YouTube probably only accepts standard video sizes.

He who knows does not speak; he who speaks does not know.
                    — Lao Tze in Tao Te Ching

Can you imagine the silence if everyone only said what he knows?
                    — Karel Čapek (The guy who gave us the word “robot” in R.U.R.)

Musicvid wrote on 12/26/2018, 6:51 PM

so if you look at this video:

When you look at it and click the HD icon on YouTube, it tells you it is a 1080p60 video. 1080p means 1920x1080, which is 16:9, a standard ratio. And since you are watching it on a 16:10 monitor, you see the black bars, while those of us using a standard 16:9 monitor do not see any black bars. Which is exactly what John Dennis has told you.

So, if you truly recorded and edited it in the 16:10 ratio, apparently YouTube re-sampled it to the standard 16:9 ratio, and there is nothing you can do about it because YouTube probably only accepts standard video sizes.

+1