Background:
After a Format C: and re-install Vegas decided to be able to print to tape from timeline again. Then this happened:
1. I print to tape from timeline - to test things. Result: heavy flicker on everything that moves. Real strobo. Sound OK though.
2. After that, flicker was even present in preview. Never seen that before. The other events in the same project (parts that were not included in the print to tape selection) are fine.
3. Selected Reduce interlace flicker for the event in question. That immediately removed flicker from preview.
4. Print to tape from timeline again: Flicker gone.
So far it's a happy ending. But what is going on really? How could I have known that flicker would happen? And if I couldn't have, why isn't Reduce interlace flicker the default choice? Why must I even think about it?
(The take in question is very straight - tripod, no zoom, no pan, no FX, just my daughter eating a sandwich and explaining that ghosts don't exist and why we must be wary of them. It's shot in PAL DV, captured and rendered as same.)
Tor
After a Format C: and re-install Vegas decided to be able to print to tape from timeline again. Then this happened:
1. I print to tape from timeline - to test things. Result: heavy flicker on everything that moves. Real strobo. Sound OK though.
2. After that, flicker was even present in preview. Never seen that before. The other events in the same project (parts that were not included in the print to tape selection) are fine.
3. Selected Reduce interlace flicker for the event in question. That immediately removed flicker from preview.
4. Print to tape from timeline again: Flicker gone.
So far it's a happy ending. But what is going on really? How could I have known that flicker would happen? And if I couldn't have, why isn't Reduce interlace flicker the default choice? Why must I even think about it?
(The take in question is very straight - tripod, no zoom, no pan, no FX, just my daughter eating a sandwich and explaining that ghosts don't exist and why we must be wary of them. It's shot in PAL DV, captured and rendered as same.)
Tor