What I usually do is open the divx file in VirtualDub and re-encode it into something differentchronicdevil wrote:Thanks, I was wondering why one of my AMVs had blocky parts in it. Is there a quick and easy way to change a file from divx to something that works in Vegas?Ladymercury wrote:You're very welcome
Actually, in your media pool tab, in the top right hand corner it lists the video's codec. It'll say " video codec: divx/audio codec: mp4 " etc. I know in Vegas 4 it says that. Usually, though, you can find out a codec by the way the program responds to the footage. Almost instantanously Vegas will fag out the footage by making blocky if its divx/xvid. You can also find out the codec if you play it in like winamp and load the properties.
The Idiots Guide to Vegas
- Ladymercury
- Joined: Fri Oct 12, 2001 11:19 pm
- Location: That, is what is called, Florida
" Gray? You mean GLAY?! I like Jiro! "
The Idiot's Guide To Vegas - A Tutorial for Vegas Video
Lights and Sounds, now up on utoob.
- Ladymercury
- Joined: Fri Oct 12, 2001 11:19 pm
- Location: That, is what is called, Florida
Though, I may warn you that some depression in the quality of footage may happen.Ladymercury wrote:What I usually do is open the divx file in VirtualDub and re-encode it into something differentchronicdevil wrote:Thanks, I was wondering why one of my AMVs had blocky parts in it. Is there a quick and easy way to change a file from divx to something that works in Vegas?Ladymercury wrote:You're very welcome
Actually, in your media pool tab, in the top right hand corner it lists the video's codec. It'll say " video codec: divx/audio codec: mp4 " etc. I know in Vegas 4 it says that. Usually, though, you can find out a codec by the way the program responds to the footage. Almost instantanously Vegas will fag out the footage by making blocky if its divx/xvid. You can also find out the codec if you play it in like winamp and load the properties.
" Gray? You mean GLAY?! I like Jiro! "
The Idiot's Guide To Vegas - A Tutorial for Vegas Video
Lights and Sounds, now up on utoob.
- chronicdevil
- Joined: Sun May 08, 2005 5:16 pm
- Ladymercury
- Joined: Fri Oct 12, 2001 11:19 pm
- Location: That, is what is called, Florida
Very truechronicdevil wrote:That can't be worse than having blocky parts...Ladymercury wrote:Though, I may warn you that some depression in the quality of footage may happen.
" Gray? You mean GLAY?! I like Jiro! "
The Idiot's Guide To Vegas - A Tutorial for Vegas Video
Lights and Sounds, now up on utoob.
- Ladymercury
- Joined: Fri Oct 12, 2001 11:19 pm
- Location: That, is what is called, Florida
HEY HEY HEY
I complied the tutorial into a website form: http://vegas.aoi-tori.org/
Go ahead, browse. Look at how pretty it is. Hopefully it'll get listed on the org!
I complied the tutorial into a website form: http://vegas.aoi-tori.org/
Go ahead, browse. Look at how pretty it is. Hopefully it'll get listed on the org!
" Gray? You mean GLAY?! I like Jiro! "
The Idiot's Guide To Vegas - A Tutorial for Vegas Video
Lights and Sounds, now up on utoob.
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to help out (mainly because I'm bored and have nothing better to do at 2 am)
for whole episodes, you're probably better off leaving it encoded with divx/xvid until you take clips.
you can take clips in Vdub(/mod) by using the mark in/out buttons on the bottom center side (the two rightmost buttons)
when you save your clips, you can select huffy as the codec.
this makes the filesizes more manegable while giving you editable footage
perhaps a better choice to huffy is Lagarith (lossless codec), though lagarith has been known to cause a few issues from time to time, it yeilds smaller filesizes.
VdubMod differs from Vdub in the range of footage it can import (along with other things, like built in avs script editor).
mod can import .mkv, .ogg and mpeg2 files (Vdub didn't support these formats)
for whole episodes, you're probably better off leaving it encoded with divx/xvid until you take clips.
you can take clips in Vdub(/mod) by using the mark in/out buttons on the bottom center side (the two rightmost buttons)
when you save your clips, you can select huffy as the codec.
this makes the filesizes more manegable while giving you editable footage
perhaps a better choice to huffy is Lagarith (lossless codec), though lagarith has been known to cause a few issues from time to time, it yeilds smaller filesizes.
VdubMod differs from Vdub in the range of footage it can import (along with other things, like built in avs script editor).
mod can import .mkv, .ogg and mpeg2 files (Vdub didn't support these formats)
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- Joined: Sat Jan 03, 2004 1:30 pm
- Location: Chicago, Il