yeah it just looks like you upped the contrast and darkened it... actual upscaling involves random pixel generation and crap like that ur just adjusting levels
@SquirlKiller What I had actually done was "upscale" the one on the right to 720 in Vegas. Then I tried to sync it up to the original video using 2 HD capable media players. Finally doing a screen capture @ 720. so the quality of the one on the left is what was viewed. I'm sure there was a better way, but its what I had came up with at the time.
I believe I mentioned that this was a test to see if a particular "upscaling" method produced better output than simply expanding the original video.
and as I stated in the annotations (you may have had them turned off)... my results were that the end results were clearly not of HD quality, however... the benefit of better color retention seemed to be a positive outcome of the process.
Boris CC7 has a plug in for sony vegas to uprez.
slapshot1x 6 months ago
@slapshot1x Thank you. I will have to check into that, as well as perhaps trying After Effects, though I'm still more a fan of Vegas.
beanieboy007 6 months ago
yeah it just looks like you upped the contrast and darkened it... actual upscaling involves random pixel generation and crap like that ur just adjusting levels
surfacing3579 6 months ago
Sony Vegas doesn't have any upscaling methods unfortunately, while Premiere, FCP and After Effects all have some upscaling plugins that you must buy.
Something like Cyberlink PowerDirector and VReveal have their own upscalers.
PahangDragonbird 1 year ago
No difference
WeEatBrainz 1 year ago
technically both are sony upscale rendering since this video is 720p
SquirlKiller 2 years ago
@SquirlKiller What I had actually done was "upscale" the one on the right to 720 in Vegas. Then I tried to sync it up to the original video using 2 HD capable media players. Finally doing a screen capture @ 720. so the quality of the one on the left is what was viewed. I'm sure there was a better way, but its what I had came up with at the time.
beanieboy007 6 months ago
I believe I mentioned that this was a test to see if a particular "upscaling" method produced better output than simply expanding the original video.
and as I stated in the annotations (you may have had them turned off)... my results were that the end results were clearly not of HD quality, however... the benefit of better color retention seemed to be a positive outcome of the process.
*I am still looking for a good upscaling method.
beanieboy007 2 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
what kind fucken upscalling is that dip shit dosent look sharper or anything thats not up scalling noob
harizmusic 2 years ago
the difference is only that the picture on the right has better black level
Shulai1 2 years ago 2
Definitely see a difference. It's filtered much nicer.
ThatCrazyJosh 3 years ago