Setting project properties
Use the Project Properties dialog to control the default settings and store information about the current project.
From the File menu, choose Properties to display the dialog.
NOTE Select the ☐ Start all new projects with these settings checkbox to use the current settings whenever a new project is created.
Video
Use the Video tab to adjust the video format of your project. You can also click the Project Video Properties button on the Video Preview window to display this tab.
Item |
Description |
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Template |
Allows you to select a preset template to automatically configure the controls in the dialog. You may also manually change the settings and save them as a custom template for future use. To create a new template, enter a name in the text box and click the Save Template button To set your project properties to match the properties of an existing media file, click the Match Media Settings button |
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Width and Height |
Determines the frame size of your final movie when rendered. The maximum frame size for AVI, MPEG, QuickTime, Windows Media, and still-image output is 2048x2048. NOTE The maximumframe size is 4096x4096. |
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Field order |
Determines field order of the frames when drawn on the screen. Consult your capture/video output card's documentation for the proper field order for your specific device.
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Choose a setting from the drop-down list to change the pixel aspect ratio of your project. This setting will depend on your capture/video output card. Computers display pixels as squares, or a ratio of 1.0. Televisions display pixels as rectangles (ratios other than 1.0). Using the incorrect setting can result in distortion or stretching. Consult your capture/video output card's manual for the proper settings. |
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HDR Mode |
Selecting HDR10 or HLG in the drop-down menu will turn on all of the following settings:
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Output rotation |
Choose a setting from the drop-down list to rotate your project's output. Use output rotation to edit projects for display in portrait (rather than landscape) or inverted orientation:
In this example, the video was shot with the camera tripod rotated 90 degrees. However, with the project output unrotated, the video is pillarboxed within the standard landscape frame.
After choosing 90 clockwise° from the Output rotation drop-down list, the Video Preview window is rotated, and the video fills the frame. TIP If you want to rotate a media file's orientation, you can use the Rotation drop-down list on the Media Properties dialog.
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Frame rate |
Choose a setting from the drop-down list to change the frame rate of your project. The television frame rate in the US, North and Central America, parts of South America, and Japan (NTSC) is 29.97 frames per second (fps). In many parts of the world, including Europe and much of Asia, the television standard is PAL at 25 fps. France, Russia, and most of Eastern Europe use SECAM, which is a variation on PAL and also uses 25 fps. |
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Choose a setting from the drop-down list to indicate whether you want to perform video processing (compositing, scaling, previewing, rendering, and most video plug-ins) using 8-bit or 32-bit, floating-point arithmetic.
TIP
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Compositing gamma |
When you choose 32-bit floating point (full range) from the Pixel format drop-down list, you can choose a compositing gamma value.
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ACES Version / ACES color space |
Choose ACES version and Color space. |
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Choose the reference view transform to use for the project. |
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Look modification transform |
Look modification transform (LMT) is helpful feature when working with 32 bit full range or in HDR project. LMT has two options: None - This is default option. Apply Blue Light Artifact Fix - Use this LMT for desaturating blue hues to reduce the artifact caused by bright blue colors (e.g. sirens, headlights, LED lighting, etc.) In 32 bit full range project or in HDR mode, you can choose "Apply Blue Light Artifact Fix", if the video preview shows any blue light artifact due to clipping caused by bright blue colors. In an 8 bit project or 32 bit Video level project or when view transform is off, LMT will be disabled. |
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Choose a setting from the drop-down list to set the quality of the rendered video. Unless you have specific performance problems, choose Good. Choosing Best can dramatically increase rendering times. Good uses bilinear scaling without integration, while Best uses bicubic scaling with integration. If you're using high-resolution stills (or video) that will be scaled down to the final output size, choosing Best can prevent artifacts. TIP Some file formats allow you to associate a video rendering quality setting with a custom rendering template. Final rendering template settings override the Full-resolution rendering quality setting in the Project Properties dialog. |
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Choose a setting from the drop-down list to choose the curve that is used to blur frames when you add a motion blur envelope to the video bus track. Motion blurring creates the illusion of motion on individual frames (much like using a long exposure time) and can make computer-generated animation appear more smooth and natural.
The Gaussian (asymmetric), Pyramid (asymmetric), and Box (asymmetric) settings use only the left half of each curve, from the central frame back. Asymmetric settings create a hard leading edge with a trailing blur behind the moving object. |
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Deinterlace method |
Choose a setting from this drop-down list to determine the method used to render effects and deinterlace the two fields that make up a frame.
TIP No deinterlacing occurs in the Draft and Preview video preview modes. The Good and Best modes apply the selected deinterlacing method. |
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Resample mode |
Choose a setting from the drop-down list to determine how video frames will be resampled when the frame rate of a media file is lower than the project’s frame rate. This can occur either when the event has a velocity envelope or when the frame rate of the original media is different than the Frame rate setting on the Video tab of the Project Properties dialog. With resampling, the intervening frames are interpolated from the source frames, much like a crossfade effect between the original frames. This may solve some interlacing problems and other jittery output problems. You have three options to set the default resampling option as a project property:
TIP You can override the project Resample mode setting for each event using the event switches. |
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Adjust source media to better match project or render settings |
Select this checkbox if you want VEGAS Pro to scale images or adjust interlacing to allow media files to work better with your project. This setting will correct for the following types of inconsistencies:
When the checkbox is cleared, source media files are processed with their native settings. |
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Prerendered files folder |
Prerendered video files are saved to this folder so that you don't need to rerender the project every time you view it. If you want to change the location of the folder, click the Browse button and choose a location. Ideally, this location should be on a different hard drive than the one where your operating system is installed. IMPORTANT Prerendered files can consume significant drive space. Select a folder on an a/v-capable drive with ample free space: DV requires approximately 228 MB per minute. |
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Free storage space in selected folder |
Displays the total amount of available space on the selected drive. |
Audio
Use the Audio tab to change the data format of the current project.
Item |
Description |
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Master bus mode |
Choose Stereo from the drop-down list to create a two-channel stereo project. Choose 5.1 Surround if you want to perform advanced 5.1-channel mixing. |
Number of stereo busses |
Enter the number of stereo busses for the project. |
Sample rate |
Choose a sample rate from the drop-down list or enter a value in the edit box. |
Select a setting from the drop-down list to specify the number of bits used to store each sample. Higher values will increase the quality of playback and any recordings that you make. |
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Resample and stretch quality |
Choose a setting from the drop-down list to determine the accuracy with which audio files will be resampled to match your project settings. The Resample and stretch quality setting also determines the quality of processing when time-stretching audio events. |
Enable low-pass filter on LFE |
Select this checkbox if you want to apply a low-pass filter to each track in a 5.1 surround project that is assigned to the LFE channel. Applying a low-pass filter approximates the bass-management system in a 5.1 decoder and ensures that you're sending only low-frequency audio to the LFE channel. IMPORTANT Before rendering your surround project, check your surround authoring application's documentation to determine its required audio format. Some encoders require a specific cutoff frequency and rolloff, and your encoder may require that no filter be applied before encoding. |
Cutoff frequency for low-pass filter |
Choose a frequency from the drop-down list or type a frequency in the box to set the frequency above which audio will be ignored by the LFE channel. |
Low-pass filter quality |
Choose a setting from the drop-down list to determine the sharpness of filter's rolloff curve. Best produces the sharpest curve. |
Recorded files folder |
When you record audio tracks, your recorded files are saved in a single folder. If you want to change the location of the folder, click the Browse button and choose a location. Ideally, this location should be on a different hard drive than the one where your operating system is installed. TIP If you have not specified a location, you will be prompted for the location where you want to save your recorded audio when you click the Arm for Record button in the track header:
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Free storage space in selected folder |
Displays the total amount of available space on the selected drive. |
Ruler
Use the Ruler tab to change the format used to display the timeline ruler. VEGAS Pro also sends tempo information to tempo-aware audio plug-ins.
Item |
Description |
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Ruler time format |
Choose a setting from the drop-down list to choose how you want the Time Ruler to be displayed. You can change the format at any time after project creation. For more information about each time format, see Time ruler |
Ruler start time |
Enter the desired starting time for the project. For example, the ruler can be offset to start at 1 hour for timecode synchronization purposes. |
Beats per minute |
Enter your project tempo in Beats Per Minute. This tempo is used to determine the scale of the ruler (if you choose Measures & Beats from the Ruler time format drop-down list) and to specify the tempo used by the metronome. Select the Import at project tempo checkbox on the Audio tab of the Preferences dialog if you want ACID loops to be stretched to match the project tempo when you add them to the timeline or preview from the Explorer window. Clear the Import at project tempo checkbox if you want to ignore tempo information. |
Beats per measure |
Specify the number of beats in each measure. This tempo is used to determine the scale of the ruler (if you choose Measures & Beats from the Ruler time format drop-down list) and to specify the tempo used by the metronome. |
Note that gets one beat |
Specify the note that receives one beat. For example, if this value is four, then a quarter note gets one beat. This tempo is used to determine the scale of the ruler (if you choose Measures & Beats from the Ruler time format drop-down list) and to specify the tempo used by the metronome. |
Summary
Item |
Description |
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Title |
Enter a title for the project. |
Artist |
Enter the name of the artist. |
Engineer |
Enter the name of the person who mixed or edited the project. |
Copyright |
Enter copyright information for the project. |
Comments |
Enter any comments you want to associate with the project. |
Audio CD
Use the Audio CD tab to configure options for burning disc-at-once CDs. For more information, see Disc-at-once (DAO or Red Book) CD Burning
Item |
Description |
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Universal Product Code/ Media Catalog Number |
Universal Product Codes (UPC) or Media Catalog Numbers (MCN) can be written to a CD as a means of identification. However, not all CD-R drives support this feature. Check your CD-R drive documentation to determine if your drive will write these codes. Enter the code in this box, and the codes will be written to the CD along with the rest of the project. Universal product codes are administered by GS1 US: http://www.gs1us.org/. |
First track number on disc |
Enter a number in the box or to specify the track number of the first track. NOTE Specifying a value other than one will produce a valid Red Book CD, but some audio CD players may be unable to play the disc. |
Advanced
Item |
Description |
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Master Display |
Choose the characteristics of your master display device. |
360 Output |
Specify your project as a 360 project and activate 360 controls.
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Stereoscopic 3D mode |
Choose a setting from the drop-down list to create a stereoscopic 3D project, or choose Off to create a 2D project. By default, the project's Stereoscopic 3D mode, Swap Left/Right, and crosstalk cancellation settings will also be used when previewing and rendering your project, but you can override the project settings if necessary.
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