Custom frame size

pangiaxiong wrote on 5/30/2023, 1:47 PM

Hi,

I'm working on making a video to display on the Fremont led screen in Vegas and the specifications is a bit crazy. I don't know how to start it in Vegas as I don't think the custom frame size even allow me to go up to the width and height they're asking for.

Does anyone have an idea? Would be so helpful and sorry for the bad English's.

Comments

jetdv wrote on 5/30/2023, 2:06 PM

The largest number allowed is 8192 so 15,104 is not an option. What if you divided both by 2 and did 7552 x 544 and see if it properly scaled up to full size when played?

fr0sty wrote on 5/30/2023, 3:59 PM

Hate to say it, but this is one area where the VEGAS family of products cannot do what you need. You are going to have to use Adobe After Effects to pull this off... but the VEGAS team would be well advised to consider situations like this, as there is a need for it more and more these days. I'll bring it to their attention.

Systems:

Desktop

AMD Ryzen 7 1800x 8 core 16 thread at stock speed

64GB 3000mhz DDR4

Geforce RTX 3090

Windows 10

Laptop:

ASUS Zenbook Pro Duo 32GB (9980HK CPU, RTX 2060 GPU, dual 4K touch screens, main one OLED HDR)

Former user wrote on 5/30/2023, 4:07 PM

@pangiaxiong That is a crazy size, so just out of curiousity - AE will do it & render it

fr0sty wrote on 5/30/2023, 4:12 PM

Yes, AE goes up to 30,000 x 30,000. I've mentioned this to the team, hopefully eventually we can get similar limits in the VEGAS family of products as well, as I too might be affected by this limitation soon (could be designing content for an LED screen with over 250 million pixels).

Systems:

Desktop

AMD Ryzen 7 1800x 8 core 16 thread at stock speed

64GB 3000mhz DDR4

Geforce RTX 3090

Windows 10

Laptop:

ASUS Zenbook Pro Duo 32GB (9980HK CPU, RTX 2060 GPU, dual 4K touch screens, main one OLED HDR)

Former user wrote on 5/30/2023, 4:23 PM

👍

@fr0sty I did notice the ProRes doesn't do 2160x3840, I created a preset but no it didn't like going to 3840 on the height,