![]() you can do your editing first, then enable HDR mode, and render it out to a HDR MP4 file from there. However, you may want to disable 32 bit HDR mode while you edit, as it is really slow. If so, you're good to render it out as an HDR-compliant file. Press OK, then add the media to your timeline. Right click on your media in the project media pool and go to properties. Open a new 4k project, set HDR mode to ON. so it matches the settings required for HDR. Your source media says it is 10 bit and rec2020. This the mediainfo for the video before vegas renderĬomplete name : C:\Users\EQRP\Videos\Desktop\Desktop 2023.01.23 - 11.33.27.08.mp4 Yes i know my monitor is less then 1000 nits it's around 700 nits but i did not find less the 1000 nits set setting It needs your intervention here for setting the space and also likely defining what is white.Īre you sure this monitor can hit 1000 nits brightness as you have the view transform set to? Looks like it's way under that in real-world use: The problem is whatever the footage is like set to (right-click on an event and you can set the source color space) is probably on default or otherwise undefined and Vegas doesn't know how to transform it into HDR. That should be the same as what you are doing with your media player. Try turning off ACES (switch project setting to 8-bit full) and render the video and view it on your HDR device. These videos after the render in vegas 18 Matrix coefficients : BT.2020 non-constantįormat/Info : Advanced Audio Codec Low ComplexityĬomplete name : C:\Users\EQRP\Videos\Untsdaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaitled.mp4 you missed the point i mentioned vlc because some comment said your screen recording software don't support hdr thats why it's pale then i respond to him by meaning if it's because that why when i play it in vlc it don't look pale.Ĭomplete name : C:\Users\EQRP\Videos\Usdhhsdhdshhr56546456456ntitled.mp4įormat/Info : High Efficiency Video CodingĬodec ID/Info : High Efficiency Video Coding I assure you i don't care compare them because i am not expert. Provide that MediaInfo information and lets see what that produces. A straighforward solution would be great, but now we are in the area of needing more information, and that could require testing. As to you testing, you've come here with a frustrating issue, I get that, we all get that. I am not here to test and make - And yet here you are comparing VLC player with VP. You see how pale when it's in vegas note (even after i render it in hdr off or on nothing change) Media player note(it's over bright because i used snipping Tool) this problem does not appear in the media player you ask "footage isn't HDR why are you trying to create an HDR video" The answer is that I don't know if the footage is hdr or not because i don't know if shadowplay support hdr i know that my monitor is hdr and i am playing with hdr and i don't want to turn off hdr because it makes the game more fun but the problem here that my video in vegas 18 become pale. I'm confused about what you are trying to do- if the footage isn't HDR why are you trying to create an HDR video? If you're in 32-bit ACES mode turn it off and try 8-bit full. It's hard to see your screenshot, can you upload it to the forum? There's a button next to the smiley face. I am just trying to clarify the problem here just to be resolved i mentioned vlc and other media players just to let them know that the video is not pale because the recorder program i use don't support hdr. I am not here to test and make comparison, i am here to fix the problem i have. In meantime, post your PC specs etc in your signature. OK, suggestion here, use the free MediaInfo tool on your Media and post the information back here to allow us to help you. Understand these “foibles” and you will save yourself a lot of frustration. What VegasPro is good at doing is making sure it’s able to edit with many many VP-compliant media sources, ready for editing. “VLC media player is a free and open-source, portable, cross-platform media player software and streaming media server developed by the VideoLAN project.” I’ve come to realise that something like VLC is excellent at doing what it’s told to do: Well, might I suggest that’s not a good enough test. i am using shadowplay even if does not support hdr when i play the video in vlc or any video player it looks normal not pale like Hi! So your “test” for VegasPro Media compliancy is that it plays in third party players.
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