![]() ![]() I have not experimented to confirm whether this makes any difference, but others swear by this, so pay attention to it.Īlso, make sure that the Render As settings match these project settings. Finally, there has been much written about Deinterlace Method. In this way exporting crashes on the begining, after couple of secods Source files are mp4/H. I want to point out, in resolve render tab I cant choose High Encoding Profile or/and Automatic Quality. Rendering quality should be set to Best, because you are probably changing resolution, and are certainly changing the field structure. Quality of exported footage is very bad - No matter of settings I choose in Resolve, the final output is poor (pixelated, blotchiness). It is important to get the field order progressive, if your source is progressive, which I assume it is with Camtasia. So, its very necessary to fix bad quality videos as soon as possible. ![]() While I don't have my source material on-line anymore, I just opened the VEG, and here are the project properties: Problem Videos exported from Camtasia Mac are blurry. ![]() However, in the end, I got extremely good results that were, as described above, very difficult to distinguish from the original when placed back into Vegas and then "A/B'd" back and forth. In Camtasia: Edit, Preferences, Advanced, hardware acceleration, select your graphics card. It did indeed take quite a bit of fiddling to get the final MPEG-2 to look good, and in fact, my first attempt resulted in an MPEG-2 of very fuzzy quality. I just had to complete a render yesterday from a low-res, progressive MPEG-1 file (basically, a VCD, although it wasn't packaged that way). ![]() I suspect that there is something going on with what project properties. I would sure like to have a chance to see a short (5-10 second) clip of the original material, along with the MPEG-2 that results from rendering that original. Since I am 99% certain that Vegas is capable of high-quality MPEG-2 renders that will be degraded only slightly from the original (small enough differences that you have to look very closely to see them), I come to the conclusion that there must be something similar in all the situations that is, at the same time, different from the "normal" rendering that most of us do. There sure have been lots of reports in this forum lately of people having severe quality degradation when rendering to MPEG-2. ![]()
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