Comments

Steve Grisetti wrote on 10/28/2011, 3:26 PM
Assuming you captured the video from a miniDV camcorder and that you ensured that your original Vegas project was set up for DV -- which output options did you use to output your video for DVD Architect?

The most direct way to create a video for DVD Architect is to click Make Movie, then select the option to Burn a DVD with Menus, follow the prompts and then click the Send to DVD Architect Studio button. This will ensure your files are optimized for DVD AS.
musicvid10 wrote on 10/28/2011, 3:29 PM
DV NTSC or DV PAL?
It must be the same from shoot to burn.
garland wrote on 10/28/2011, 4:46 PM
It was DV NTSC all the way.
garland wrote on 10/28/2011, 4:55 PM
Steve,
Yes, I did capture from a miniDV camcorder (Sony PD170) and the project was set for DV. From there I clicked Make Movie>Burn a DVD with Menus and followed the prompts. It burned promptly, but there was the ghosting.

Now that I think of it, I encountered a similar problem a year or two ago on another system. Seems that after I re-rendered and burned it a second time it was fine. Unless you have any other suggestion I will render and burn it again and see what I get.

Thanks much.
Steve Grisetti wrote on 10/28/2011, 6:53 PM
Could it be your computer is haunted? Ghosts run rampant this close to Halloween. ;)
PeterDuke wrote on 10/28/2011, 8:25 PM
By ghosting, do you mean interlace artifacts? If you view interlaced video on a progressive screen using a player that is not set to de-interlace, you will get this.
garland wrote on 10/28/2011, 9:51 PM
The image looks like it has sort of a shadowy identical second image just offset from the main image.
musicvid10 wrote on 10/28/2011, 11:27 PM
Are you viewing the DVD on your home player and TV, or on your computer?