In sony vegas

Rendered Video

I used a different media player and its still bright.l33tmeatwad wrote:Check your export settings (post them if you can) and try it with different media players to make sure it's not WMP.
kireblue wrote:are you rendering straight to Mp4 out of vegas? If so, I would recommend that render out your video as a lossless AVI and see if the same brightness issue exists. Also, I recommend that you render out your videos as lossless AVIs regardless. The files will be extremely large, but they maintain better quality this way. You can then encode your large AVI file into a small mp4 file by using a program called zarxgui That program and many other useful programs are included in a installer package called amvpack http://pixelblended.com/software/amvpack/ Zarxgui does require avisnth to function, and so you will need to install that from the AMVpack as well. A guide to using zarxgui can be found here http://pixelblended.com/amv-101/encoding-tutorial/
btw: If you are unfamiliar with the term "lossless avi", then you will need to either install either the lagarith or Ut Video codec. Ut Video is actually also available in the amvpack. Once it is installed, you will see the option in vegas to render out your AIs with it.
thank you very much for using your time to help me. Im greatly appreciated!l33tmeatwad wrote:Depends on your output, but since I see it is HD and YUV you need ot use UtVideo YUV420 BT.709, SD video would need to be BT.601.