

Similarly, if you keyframe the motion of moving graphics, such as with 2D or 3D Track Motion, or panning across photos using the Event Pan/Crop tool, each frame will be crisp unless you add motion blur. Depending on the frame rate, that can make unnatural-looking motion, and it’s especially noticeable when the text is overlayed on footage which has a motion blur. If you create moving text, each frame of text will be crisp and clean with no blur. Here are my render settings: I am currently using Sony Vegas Pro 13, and this video was recorded with Nvidia Shadowplay. It’s also useful when you use animated transitions, text, or graphics animations within VEGAS. Here is a Sony Vegas render screenshot of how the video looks on VLC after rendering: As you can see, the colours are definitely off in Vegas, as well as the render. Modern stop motion, utilizing motion blur added in post, looks much smoother and more natural.
#RSMB FOR SONY VEGAS PRO 16 MOVIE#
Movie companies add motion blur to special effects sequences like stop motion, which at one time looked very choppy, because it was made up of a series of still photographs of posed objects, with small changes between each photo. So, you can fix choppy-looking footage which has no motion blur, such as that shot with a high shutter speed. VEGAS Pro lets you add motion blur to footage which has no motion blur, or too little.
