Correct slight video rotation from horizontal?

MURRAY-LESHNER wrote on 9/19/2024, 11:43 PM

Hello:

I shot concert video with a phone on a stabilizer gimbal on a tripod. The screen looked level horizontally to me, but I realized later the platform my camera and I were on was not aligned with the stage the musicians were on. So I have a dozen videos with a distracting tilt that looks like everything is going to slide off the low side of the stage.

Is there a 'feature' that can correct rotation less than 90 degrees?

I HAVE Vegas Pro 21 Build 315. I said HAVE instead of use because I am worse than a newbie. I have accomplished a single video stabilization and to be honest that is probably the only thing I have figured out. I upgraded from Sonic Forge 17 which had minimal video tools, and that was my skill level before Vegas Pro 21. Sounds pathetic, but I haven't found training level 0 (or -1) yet. I don't have the vocabulary for some of the how-to videos I have watched.

I usually search for a tool or feature and read the help file to some degree of success.

Thank you

 

Comments

MURRAY-LESHNER wrote on 9/20/2024, 12:23 AM

Update:

I opened an MP4 file, got Video Event FX & Pan/Crop, somehow got the video into the larger preview space from the tiny 'filmstrip' & audio waveform area. I somehow enabled a dotted white line frame & rotated to 3 degrees to approximately make the white frame approx. parallel with the tilted stage I'm trying to correct.

 

I then tried render-as and the default format matched my video and it IS processing, taking several minutes. This answers my question of how to apply this to the whole video or all the frames within.

How I got this far I am not sure...something approximating a monkey clicking a mouse to get a banana.

I see the output mp4 file has a default name Untitled. Either I missed my cue to name it or have to find the most recent Untitled.mp4 file & rename.

 

If the result plays video & audio as desired, I can then apply my audio edits back in Sonic Forge 17 (have not yet figured out how to access it from Vegas Pro user interface).

Then try to repeat the same sequence of steps for the remaining 11 videos.

 

MURRAY-LESHNER wrote on 9/20/2024, 12:30 AM

>expletive deleted<

 

It worked! A testament to some level of intuitive menu, despite a sea of toolbars and options, achieved by a knuckle-dragging operator. Maybe a huge monitor vs. 15" laptop makes it easier to visually confirm the amount of rotation.

Maybe the upright-walking among you knows a way to auto-level, or 'record' the steps taken like a macro of yesteryear for repetition.

john_dennis wrote on 9/20/2024, 12:35 AM

Pan/Crop

Dexcon wrote on 9/20/2024, 12:35 AM

A video event's framing - including rotation - can be adjusted by using the pan/crop feature on that video event.

Pan/crop is accessed by clicking on the square icon in the event's header and rotation can be achieved by placing the mouse cursor in the area outside of the image but within the circle.

If there is more than one video event that needs rotation, copy the event, highlight the other events and then R click and paste the event attributes via the menu option that appears on R clicking.

Cameras: Sony FDR-AX100E; GoPro Hero 11 Black Creator Edition

Installed: Vegas Pro 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 & 22, HitFilm Pro 2021.3, DaVinci Resolve Studio 20, BCC 2025, Mocha Pro 2025.0, NBFX TotalFX 7, Neat NR, DVD Architect 6.0, MAGIX Travel Maps, Sound Forge Pro 16, SpectraLayers Pro 11, iZotope RX11 Advanced and many other iZ plugins, Vegasaur 4.0

Windows 11

Dell Alienware Aurora 11:

10th Gen Intel i9 10900KF - 10 cores (20 threads) - 3.7 to 5.3 GHz

NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER 8GB GDDR6 - liquid cooled

64GB RAM - Dual Channel HyperX FURY DDR4 XMP at 3200MHz

C drive: 2TB Samsung 990 PCIe 4.0 NVMe M.2 PCIe SSD

D: drive: 4TB Samsung 870 SATA SSD (used for media for editing current projects)

E: drive: 2TB Samsung 870 SATA SSD

F: drive: 6TB WD 7200 rpm Black HDD 3.5"

Dell Ultrasharp 32" 4K Color Calibrated Monitor

 

LAPTOP:

Dell Inspiron 5310 EVO 13.3"

i5-11320H CPU

C Drive: 1TB Corsair Gen4 NVMe M.2 2230 SSD (upgraded from the original 500 GB SSD)

Monitor is 2560 x 1600 @ 60 Hz

Dexcon wrote on 9/20/2024, 12:43 AM

I can then apply my audio edits back in Sonic Forge 17 (have not yet figured out how to access it from Vegas Pro user interface).

The preferred audio editor can be selected from Options/Preferences/Audio (tab) - SFP17 may already be coded automatically but if it isn't, you can use the browse button and drill down in Program Files and click on Sound Forge's .exe file.

Then in Vegas Pro, R click on the audio event and select 'Open in Audio Editor' (destructive) or 'Open Copy in Audio Editor' (retains the original audio).

 

You might want to watch a series of tutorials that Vegas Creative Software uploaded to their YouTube channel 4 years ago. The tutorials use Vegas Pro 17 but they covers all the basics of Vegas Pro which will still be valid for later Vegas Pro versions, The link to the tutorial series is

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLDenmwGaF5W6jN_weEpuliY6dB6ocXyCe

Last changed by Dexcon on 9/20/2024, 12:49 AM, changed a total of 2 times.

Cameras: Sony FDR-AX100E; GoPro Hero 11 Black Creator Edition

Installed: Vegas Pro 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 & 22, HitFilm Pro 2021.3, DaVinci Resolve Studio 20, BCC 2025, Mocha Pro 2025.0, NBFX TotalFX 7, Neat NR, DVD Architect 6.0, MAGIX Travel Maps, Sound Forge Pro 16, SpectraLayers Pro 11, iZotope RX11 Advanced and many other iZ plugins, Vegasaur 4.0

Windows 11

Dell Alienware Aurora 11:

10th Gen Intel i9 10900KF - 10 cores (20 threads) - 3.7 to 5.3 GHz

NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER 8GB GDDR6 - liquid cooled

64GB RAM - Dual Channel HyperX FURY DDR4 XMP at 3200MHz

C drive: 2TB Samsung 990 PCIe 4.0 NVMe M.2 PCIe SSD

D: drive: 4TB Samsung 870 SATA SSD (used for media for editing current projects)

E: drive: 2TB Samsung 870 SATA SSD

F: drive: 6TB WD 7200 rpm Black HDD 3.5"

Dell Ultrasharp 32" 4K Color Calibrated Monitor

 

LAPTOP:

Dell Inspiron 5310 EVO 13.3"

i5-11320H CPU

C Drive: 1TB Corsair Gen4 NVMe M.2 2230 SSD (upgraded from the original 500 GB SSD)

Monitor is 2560 x 1600 @ 60 Hz

MURRAY-LESHNER wrote on 9/20/2024, 2:05 AM

Thank you, john_d & Dex.

MURRAY-LESHNER wrote on 9/20/2024, 2:28 AM

I tried opening a group of videos R-click selecting them, then starting the render-as process, but the process of naming the first one made me realize multiple events needing rotation correction may not be the same as batch processing a folder of videos. I didn't understand the definition of an 'event' so my expectations are skewed.

I am still not understanding how to preview the amount of rotation. The first time I saw the dotting white frame it was intuitive what I was going to get.

The 2nd video I set up did not show the rotation in the preview window, but the completed rendering had the rotation applied.

Doing them singly takes more time (if batching is even possible), but prevents errors like naming them all the same thing. Or multiple events is not the same thing as batch processing multiple files.

Thanks for the help.

Dexcon wrote on 9/20/2024, 5:52 AM

 I didn't understand the definition of an 'event'

'Event' refers to the media - video or audio - that is used on Vegas Pro's timeline. If you look at Vegas Pro's user manual (Help/Contents and Index), video and audio media are called 'events' throughout the user manual. Other editing programs may call them 'clips' or something else, but in the end they are media.

Re rotating in pan/crop, you can also code in the angle of rotation in pan/crop's properties field (see arrow below):

When rotating, its usually necessary to zoom in the pan/crop window so that the corners of the rotated image are within the frame, otherwise you'll get black areas in the timeline image because some of the rotated image is now 'under-sized' in the frame - as shown by the double-ended arrow above.

Cameras: Sony FDR-AX100E; GoPro Hero 11 Black Creator Edition

Installed: Vegas Pro 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 & 22, HitFilm Pro 2021.3, DaVinci Resolve Studio 20, BCC 2025, Mocha Pro 2025.0, NBFX TotalFX 7, Neat NR, DVD Architect 6.0, MAGIX Travel Maps, Sound Forge Pro 16, SpectraLayers Pro 11, iZotope RX11 Advanced and many other iZ plugins, Vegasaur 4.0

Windows 11

Dell Alienware Aurora 11:

10th Gen Intel i9 10900KF - 10 cores (20 threads) - 3.7 to 5.3 GHz

NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER 8GB GDDR6 - liquid cooled

64GB RAM - Dual Channel HyperX FURY DDR4 XMP at 3200MHz

C drive: 2TB Samsung 990 PCIe 4.0 NVMe M.2 PCIe SSD

D: drive: 4TB Samsung 870 SATA SSD (used for media for editing current projects)

E: drive: 2TB Samsung 870 SATA SSD

F: drive: 6TB WD 7200 rpm Black HDD 3.5"

Dell Ultrasharp 32" 4K Color Calibrated Monitor

 

LAPTOP:

Dell Inspiron 5310 EVO 13.3"

i5-11320H CPU

C Drive: 1TB Corsair Gen4 NVMe M.2 2230 SSD (upgraded from the original 500 GB SSD)

Monitor is 2560 x 1600 @ 60 Hz

jetdv wrote on 9/20/2024, 8:02 AM

You can also rotate Track Motion if everything on the track needs rotated. The Picture in Picture effect will let you rotate (change it back to full screen, though!)

MURRAY-LESHNER wrote on 9/20/2024, 10:39 AM

The next three videos I tried this on never showed the dotted white 'rotation effect' after I entered an angle in degrees, and after rendering, there was no rotation applied. So I'm missing at least one step.

I can't read on my small screen what commands were clicked in the example video, so I thought I could just count lines in a dropdown menu. But getting video to appear in the preview window seems to be a step I missed...three more times.

andyrpsmith wrote on 9/20/2024, 11:01 AM

I also use Pan/Crop all the time to level my images. Also you can use key frames to smoothly keep the horizon level during the clip. I always use it when by the sea as it is so easy to tip the horizon especially while panning.

(Intel 3rd gen i5@4.1GHz, 32GB RAM, SSD, 1080Ti GPU, Windows 10) Not now used with Vegas.

13th gen i913900K - water cooled, 96GB RAM, 4TB M2 drive, 4TB games SSD, 2TB video SSD, GPU RTX 4080 Super, Windows 11 pro

MURRAY-LESHNER wrote on 9/21/2024, 9:07 PM

I can open a video and add the Crop FX selection, but I don't know the difference between doing it with Media FX vs. Video Output FX. They look the same once selected.

However, I have only successfully 'applied' the rotation angle once or twice so far out of many attempts, so the successful tries were part luck. I can't figure out how I got the dotted white FX 'frame' to appear. That seems to be the difference. If that isn't accomplished, the Render occurs without the incompletely entered option settings.

I'll go try to read a help file or find a demo video I can magnify to visibility again and see if I learned enough since my last help search.

Or maybe someone will recognize what step(s) I'm missing. Maybe I'm in the neighborhood instead of completely lost.

Thanks

MURRAY-LESHNER wrote on 9/21/2024, 10:18 PM

Apparently there is a timeout for being logged in. I have typed comments only to 'receive an Error 403 - something is broken and discover I was logged out at some point while typing, and lost the typing.

 

When I open a video that did not previously have audio peaks created, Opening media produces a video 'frame' timeline and audio peaks. Importing does not always create these visual progress steps.

The last video 'frame' or section has icons for FX and I think Crop/Rotate. The latter produces the dotted white tool frame I was missing. On a small screen it is a little hard to visually compare the orientation of the white box to the non-level video. Maybe there is a smarter way to preview. Render next, apparently. If I over- or under-corrected the rotation from level, I guess repeating (and deleting the .sfx file) is an option.

 

andyrpsmith wrote on 9/22/2024, 7:16 AM

Murray what you really need to do is to just play with Pan/crop on a single clip on its own on the timeline to get to know how it all works. And try the key frame option too as it really helps keep the level over the clip. Also turn on grid lines in preview so you can see the level across the screen.

Last changed by andyrpsmith on 9/22/2024, 7:22 AM, changed a total of 1 times.

(Intel 3rd gen i5@4.1GHz, 32GB RAM, SSD, 1080Ti GPU, Windows 10) Not now used with Vegas.

13th gen i913900K - water cooled, 96GB RAM, 4TB M2 drive, 4TB games SSD, 2TB video SSD, GPU RTX 4080 Super, Windows 11 pro

mark-y wrote on 9/22/2024, 9:07 AM

Murray, there is a video tutorials section on this forum that will help you get started with all the basic functions including image manipulation.

That said, you seem to be a good job of figuring it out on your own. That's by far the best way to learn this stuff.

3d87c4 wrote on 9/22/2024, 3:27 PM

Idea from left field:

Apply the Stereoscopic 3D Adjust fx and adjust rotation manually, or use autocorrect, with Automatic crop enabled (the default).

Del XPS 17 laptop

Processor    13th Gen Intel(R) Core(TM) i9-13900H   2.60 GHz
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MURRAY-LESHNER wrote on 9/22/2024, 8:05 PM

Thanks for all the suggestions & ideas.

 

3POINT wrote on 9/23/2024, 7:14 AM

Idea from left field:

Apply the Stereoscopic 3D Adjust fx and adjust rotation manually, or use autocorrect, with Automatic crop enabled (the default).

My favourite way to level the horizons in my videos, because it automatically zooms and crops the video according the used rotation. An extra step that has to be done manually when using the other proposed options, pan/crop tool, trackmotion or PIPfx.

andyrpsmith wrote on 9/23/2024, 12:20 PM

Good suggestion, tried it but not sure exactly what auto correct does.

Last changed by andyrpsmith on 9/23/2024, 12:21 PM, changed a total of 1 times.

(Intel 3rd gen i5@4.1GHz, 32GB RAM, SSD, 1080Ti GPU, Windows 10) Not now used with Vegas.

13th gen i913900K - water cooled, 96GB RAM, 4TB M2 drive, 4TB games SSD, 2TB video SSD, GPU RTX 4080 Super, Windows 11 pro

MURRAY-LESHNER wrote on 9/23/2024, 2:20 PM

I finished my part of the project! Getting onto the first rung of the Vegas ladder was a big step.

 

Thanks for the patient help.

MURRAY-LESHNER wrote on 1/31/2025, 3:07 AM

Using Vegas Pro 21 build 315:

I can use Scene Rotation to make small rotation corrections like tilted video from a tilting tripod, but so far I have only figured out how to enter a rotation in degrees, but not preview it for the purpose of determining how much to rotate it.

I am not sure if my description is clear, but by analogy, when editing still photos, it is easy to graphically rotate a single image to visually determine what is straight (and not care what the actual number of degrees of rotation is).

Is there way to do this for video? It not, is there a way to export a single frame as some sort of image (like jpeg) that could be rotated in a photo editor to determine the amount of rotation to enter in the Scene Rotation Effect? Or possibly a different tool for rotation? In my last question, some time ago, some suggestions were offered for other types of correction, like Stereoscopic 3D. I didn't understand what that did.

I once made a rotation around an axis and chose the wrong axis. Since I cold not preview the effect with Scene Rotation, I didn't know what I had done until the rendering was done. It was horrible and funny at the same time. Kind of a dynamic carnival mirror effect.

Thank you

 

 

Dexcon wrote on 1/31/2025, 3:48 AM

Just above the Preview Window is a 'grid' icon. If you click on that icon and from the dropdown menu select 'Grid', the Preview Window is overlaid with a grid pattern which can be used as a reference to line up video or still images against the vertical or horizontal grid lines.

The number of V and H grid lines can be manually set via controls in Options/Preferences/Video (tab)

This approach works very well using the rotate function in pan/crop.

Cameras: Sony FDR-AX100E; GoPro Hero 11 Black Creator Edition

Installed: Vegas Pro 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 & 22, HitFilm Pro 2021.3, DaVinci Resolve Studio 20, BCC 2025, Mocha Pro 2025.0, NBFX TotalFX 7, Neat NR, DVD Architect 6.0, MAGIX Travel Maps, Sound Forge Pro 16, SpectraLayers Pro 11, iZotope RX11 Advanced and many other iZ plugins, Vegasaur 4.0

Windows 11

Dell Alienware Aurora 11:

10th Gen Intel i9 10900KF - 10 cores (20 threads) - 3.7 to 5.3 GHz

NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER 8GB GDDR6 - liquid cooled

64GB RAM - Dual Channel HyperX FURY DDR4 XMP at 3200MHz

C drive: 2TB Samsung 990 PCIe 4.0 NVMe M.2 PCIe SSD

D: drive: 4TB Samsung 870 SATA SSD (used for media for editing current projects)

E: drive: 2TB Samsung 870 SATA SSD

F: drive: 6TB WD 7200 rpm Black HDD 3.5"

Dell Ultrasharp 32" 4K Color Calibrated Monitor

 

LAPTOP:

Dell Inspiron 5310 EVO 13.3"

i5-11320H CPU

C Drive: 1TB Corsair Gen4 NVMe M.2 2230 SSD (upgraded from the original 500 GB SSD)

Monitor is 2560 x 1600 @ 60 Hz

Dexcon wrote on 1/31/2025, 5:44 AM

To your other question:

is there a way to export a single frame as some sort of image (like jpeg) that could be rotated in a photo editor

Yes, there is. Click on the camera icon in the toolbar above the Preview Window:

... which will save the image in the Preview Window as either a .jpg or .png snapshot to a folder location of your choice.

Cameras: Sony FDR-AX100E; GoPro Hero 11 Black Creator Edition

Installed: Vegas Pro 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 & 22, HitFilm Pro 2021.3, DaVinci Resolve Studio 20, BCC 2025, Mocha Pro 2025.0, NBFX TotalFX 7, Neat NR, DVD Architect 6.0, MAGIX Travel Maps, Sound Forge Pro 16, SpectraLayers Pro 11, iZotope RX11 Advanced and many other iZ plugins, Vegasaur 4.0

Windows 11

Dell Alienware Aurora 11:

10th Gen Intel i9 10900KF - 10 cores (20 threads) - 3.7 to 5.3 GHz

NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER 8GB GDDR6 - liquid cooled

64GB RAM - Dual Channel HyperX FURY DDR4 XMP at 3200MHz

C drive: 2TB Samsung 990 PCIe 4.0 NVMe M.2 PCIe SSD

D: drive: 4TB Samsung 870 SATA SSD (used for media for editing current projects)

E: drive: 2TB Samsung 870 SATA SSD

F: drive: 6TB WD 7200 rpm Black HDD 3.5"

Dell Ultrasharp 32" 4K Color Calibrated Monitor

 

LAPTOP:

Dell Inspiron 5310 EVO 13.3"

i5-11320H CPU

C Drive: 1TB Corsair Gen4 NVMe M.2 2230 SSD (upgraded from the original 500 GB SSD)

Monitor is 2560 x 1600 @ 60 Hz

MURRAY-LESHNER wrote on 1/31/2025, 3:53 PM

Cool & thank you x2.