When viewing mts files from a hacked Panasonic GH2 shot under certain lighting situations, (for example, but not limited to, a well-lit foreground/poorly lit background); the files look normal in Windows Media Player, but once viewing a rendered output file from Vegas - there appears to be "digital rain" in the background.
This rain appears as diagonal streaks; some more brightly lit streaks than others and varying in size. I have read on other forums others also have this issue in Adobe Premiere. The prescribed solution is to transcode the mts files to a codec such as Avid's DNxHD.
Besides the fact, for me, that Vegas is rejecting these transcoded DNxHD files - it's not a practical solution being that the files from the hacked GH2 are already large to begin with. The transcoding makes them ridiculously large.
Any ideas on how to address this within Vegas Pro 12? A script, a setting?
This rain appears as diagonal streaks; some more brightly lit streaks than others and varying in size. I have read on other forums others also have this issue in Adobe Premiere. The prescribed solution is to transcode the mts files to a codec such as Avid's DNxHD.
Besides the fact, for me, that Vegas is rejecting these transcoded DNxHD files - it's not a practical solution being that the files from the hacked GH2 are already large to begin with. The transcoding makes them ridiculously large.
Any ideas on how to address this within Vegas Pro 12? A script, a setting?