Can Vegas do Multi-Camera editing?

A1 Video Professionals wrote on 12/2/2009, 8:30 PM
I am looking to make Vegas my main editing system.

I wanted to know if Vegas has a multi camera editing mode, where 2 or 3 different camera views can be mixed together with ease?

My current system has a feature called "Quadcam" and I can load up to 4 different camera views and edit all of them together as they play back in real time. All I do is watch my monitors and pick the view I want. It even allows me to go back and re-edit a cut that missed its mark by allowing me a 3 second leaway on either side of the clip. In other words, I can take the clip and extend it 3 additional seconds on either end to cover up a glick I missed and it remains insink.

Comments

stopint wrote on 12/2/2009, 8:49 PM
Multicamera Workflow
Edit multicamera productions intuitively and quickly by specifying shots as you watch your project. Switch between as many as 32 video sources with a keyboard command or a click of your mouse. Vegas Pro 9 software keeps all unused shots as alternate takes to make fine-tuning your edits more efficient.
Marc S wrote on 12/3/2009, 12:20 AM
Yes, multi-cam in Vegas is great. The takes option is really good.
Spot|DSE wrote on 12/3/2009, 1:08 AM
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jetdv wrote on 12/3/2009, 7:38 AM
Vegas has been able to do multi-cam editing via scripts since June of 2003. It was added as a built-in feature in Vegas Pro 8. So you can either use the built-in method or look at the scripting options such as Excalibur and Ultimate S.
warriorking wrote on 12/3/2009, 8:05 AM
Vegas works great with Multicamera feeds, doing a project as we speak from 3 different camcorders ........Vegas makes it a breeze ...
musicvid10 wrote on 12/3/2009, 8:51 AM
I personally love it. I make a rough-cut pass in real time, then go through and loop each cut while tweaking on the fly, and a few hours later I'm ready to render a test screening.

I always copy my native video tracks to new ones before creating the multicam track. This keeps them handy If I need something later.
Byron K wrote on 12/3/2009, 9:59 AM
Pls note though, all the clips must be the EXACT same format for this to work. Found this out the hard way after hours of trblshooting and RTFM. Had two different cams that both put out .mov format and it wouldn't work for some reason. Finally, gave up and rerendered both tracks then it worked OK. (:
TheHappyFriar wrote on 12/3/2009, 10:32 AM
in Vegas 8c I just made a multicamera project with vary differing media types: HDV, DV, image sequence & generated media.

You select your tracks first, then make a multicamera track, then enable multitrack editing. Crash/freeze free.
johnmeyer wrote on 12/3/2009, 10:34 AM
Pls note though, all the clips must be the EXACT same format for this to work. It sounds like you had some sort of problem, so I don't doubt that you found some limitation. However, the statement might be a little misleading in that you can most definitely mix formats when doing a multi-cam shoot. I do it all the time and have on many occasions intermixed DV, HDV, and AVCHD all in the same project, with output cropped and rendered to 4:3 SD MPEG-2 for DVD.

I don't have the same breadth of experience with other editing programs that other folks who used to be on this forum had (and have) but it is my impression that multi-camera editing is one of the biggest strengths of Vegas and its ability to intermix just about anything and to sync and then cut between cameras -- either with the scripts that Ed mentions (I use Excalibur), or with the native features in 8.x and 9.x -- is simply fantastic.

I'm not always a fanboy of Vegas, but when it comes to multi-cam, I'm down for it.
amendegw wrote on 12/3/2009, 10:54 AM
" I do it all the time and have on many occasions intermixed DV, HDV, and AVCHD all in the same project, with output cropped and rendered to 4:3 SD MPEG-2 for DVD. "John,

This question is somewhat off-topic, but how do you set your Project Properties for this? Conventional wisdom is to match your source media, but if the source media has mulitple formats, what's the best practice? Output format?

...Jerry

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Spot|DSE wrote on 12/3/2009, 11:00 AM
Set it to the predominant format (what you have the most of), and failing that, set it to the highest resolution format you're using. No point in resampling everything to 720 x 480 for output format when all your content is HD acquired.
johnmeyer wrote on 12/3/2009, 11:13 AM
Yes, I always set it to the highest resolution of the formats I am using. Two reasons for this: First, the playback for high res is faster if the project properties match. Since playback of lower-res is always faster, you need the playback speed optimization to match the format that plays back the slowest.

Second, any generated media (titles, etc.) will be created at the project resolution. In general, generating these at higher resolution and then down-res'ng during the render (remember to use "Best" quality when doing this!) seems to produce better output.
Byron K wrote on 12/3/2009, 10:46 PM


I'll have to continue to try and crack this multicam nut. It's probobly not Vegas but the format my cams are using or I'm not getting a setting right in Vegas, operator head space or all of the above. I'm working w/ .mov and .avi files. Anyway, good to know that the multicam works with multi formats.
Thanks! Byron
warriorking wrote on 12/4/2009, 9:07 AM
My biggest headache was the audio sync in Multicam projects in Vegas, but with the release of Plural eyes the syncing of the the different audio's has become a simple click of the mouse button....Can't say enough good things about the wonderful program addition....