I have a box full of 8mm and Super8mm film that I've been converting to digital to share with my family. Because it was all shot on a handheld unit dragging actual celluloid, it was subject to both the wobbles of the operator and the variance of the mechanism. Vegas has a stabiliser plug-in, but it crops my lovely 1450x730 WS image down to a relative 1075x604 pan-n-scan version of itself. (See image comparison attachment.) In this shot, the stabiliser crops out the house on the left, the car on the right, and nearly all of the sky; it's like looking at the same scene through a paper towel tube.
I can work around this by rendering a stabilised clip, and adding it as a layer atop the source in a new project (one that doesn't recognise the clip or think it needs the effect,) dialing its transparency down to about 50% and using it as a guide for tilt, pan, and rotation (applied by hand to each frame of the original.) When finished, I turn the "guide" layer off, rescale the image vertically, adjust 18FPS up to 30p, apply other effects (color, saturation, brightness/contrast) and render the final. (That's the easy part.)
Of course, the frame of the image seems to wobble strangely around , but you can see everything there is to see; considering this is 50-year-old footage, that's got a certain value to it. But the Stabilise plug-in has no slider or tic box for Do Not Crop, so for now, this seems to be the only way to do this. It's a time-eating PITA, though.
Does anyone make a plug-in that does what I'm doing by hand? Is there a way to get the stabiliser to stop throwing away 40% of my image?
This is Vegas 15 on an HP z840 with 2x Xeon 12-core CPUs running Win10; FWIW, I've been using Vegas since it was still a Sound Forge product. (Though I have - and occasionally use - other NLE apps, there's an expression about "cold, dead fingers" that comes to mind.)