Hi, I've read a lot of the recent posts on here about leveling your rendered output, but I'm still a little confused.
We've edited a film by creating a custom window layout where Vegas' preview window sits on our HDTV. I like the way the image looks, so to preserve that look, do I still need to add the Levels preset "Computer RGB to Studio RGB" before rendering to NTSC Mpeg-2 for DVD? I ask because my DVD player produces images that look identical to Vegas' preview window (provided all settings on the player are at neutral and contrast is set to -2).
However, when the same DVD was played once on a laptop connected to a consumer DLP projector, the bright whites were insanely blown-out. I wasn't sure if it was the fault of the software media player, the projector, or the fact that no "Computer RGB to Studio RGB" preset was applied before rendering. Given that, as I said, the DVD looked good on my TV and when played through a 3LCD projector, I blame the DLP projector or the software player.
What do you think?
Thanks for any advice. I'm making the final render today.
We've edited a film by creating a custom window layout where Vegas' preview window sits on our HDTV. I like the way the image looks, so to preserve that look, do I still need to add the Levels preset "Computer RGB to Studio RGB" before rendering to NTSC Mpeg-2 for DVD? I ask because my DVD player produces images that look identical to Vegas' preview window (provided all settings on the player are at neutral and contrast is set to -2).
However, when the same DVD was played once on a laptop connected to a consumer DLP projector, the bright whites were insanely blown-out. I wasn't sure if it was the fault of the software media player, the projector, or the fact that no "Computer RGB to Studio RGB" preset was applied before rendering. Given that, as I said, the DVD looked good on my TV and when played through a 3LCD projector, I blame the DLP projector or the software player.
What do you think?
Thanks for any advice. I'm making the final render today.