Hello everyone, just signed up a few moments ago. I've been reading and searching these forums for some time now and a few of my questions couldn't be answered, so here they are.
Spontaneously, I purchased Sony Vegas after reading some reviews on it but now that I'm using it I'm having a hard time seeing if you can rotoscope in sony vegas? I don't really want to spend more $$ on AE or a few different programs. (To be more specific, I'm wanting to lightsabers)
I might be interested in buying another editing program if it allows you to rotoscope. (I hope I am using this term correctly) Just need to be lead in the right direction.
My other question goes with the first one. Quality of the post production film. It pisses me off every time I save it to a file to upload to youtube or even if it stays on my computer because the film becomes all choppy in post production, even sometimes my film with separate from music (That is probably from using windows movie maker) I have a sony handycam cmos hd, it claims to record in 1080i , so how do I keep it close to that video quality after editing? Any help is appreciated.
-Drmshake
Spontaneously, I purchased Sony Vegas after reading some reviews on it but now that I'm using it I'm having a hard time seeing if you can rotoscope in sony vegas? I don't really want to spend more $$ on AE or a few different programs. (To be more specific, I'm wanting to lightsabers)
I might be interested in buying another editing program if it allows you to rotoscope. (I hope I am using this term correctly) Just need to be lead in the right direction.
My other question goes with the first one. Quality of the post production film. It pisses me off every time I save it to a file to upload to youtube or even if it stays on my computer because the film becomes all choppy in post production, even sometimes my film with separate from music (That is probably from using windows movie maker) I have a sony handycam cmos hd, it claims to record in 1080i , so how do I keep it close to that video quality after editing? Any help is appreciated.
-Drmshake