

That format is a raw transfer of digital information from the tape. You can use Vegas for that or any other program that captures video. Quote from: stantheman1976 on November 29, 2009, 10:10:13 AM If you can you need to recapture the video into DV-AVI. Just import the DVD video, do your edits, and save with the appropriate wide screen template. You're just going to lose a bit of quality because you're going to have to re-encode the video to get it to the correct ratio. You can still work with the DVD video you have now. If you use a separate MPEG-2 encoder you need to make sure you choose wide screen when encoding with it. When you output the video you need to choose the same properties as your template. Now while you're editing you'll see what the final video should look like while you're editing. For normal interlaced 16:9 you'll choose NTSC or PAL DV Wides creen bottom filed first. Import your video into Vegas and choose your project properties.


That is determined during the final video processing. It actually doesn't matter what aspect ratio you choose while capturing. If you can you need to recapture the video into DV-AVI. how do i actually stretch it back to 16:9 so that nothing is chopped off and the ratio looks right again? so the video still looks squished, but now the top and bottom are missing as well, which only worsens the problem. i've played around in the event pan/crop feature and all that seems to do is literally just crop part of the video off, but it doesn't fix the aspect ratio.
#Vegas 16 pro apply video pan to multicam take how to
i can't seem to find exactly how to do that in vegas. but i'd like to just fix this on the actual video so there's no need to adjust playback settings, by stretching/squishing the video back to 16:9.

when i play it back in vlc media player, i can fix this real easy by just changing the playback aspect ratio to 16:9 and it looks right again. i shot some minidv video in 16:9, but when it was transferred (using a standalone dvd burner, not by me) somehow the resulting dvd is in 4:3, so the video looks all stretched/squished to fit fullscreen. Quote from: junkyardt on November 28, 2009, 11:50:07 PM i'm pretty new to vegas and i think i'm getting the hang of it, but i've got a problem here with aspect ratio. I'm pretty new to vegas and i think i'm getting the hang of it, but i've got a problem here with aspect ratio.
