Comments

Former user wrote on 6/3/2012, 7:28 PM
IF you are tilting the screen 90 degrees, then there does not seem to be a need to tilt the video. Unless I misunderstand.

In your original question though, if your video is horizontal aspect, and you want a finished vertical aspect, it has to be rendered.

if your TV screen is normally horizontal and your video is horizontal and you tilt the screen to vertical, the video will tilt with it.

Dave T2
TheHappyFriar wrote on 6/3/2012, 8:04 PM
Pan/crop can be used to rotate your video. Rotate it 90 degrees in the direction you need.

essami wrote on 6/3/2012, 9:33 PM
Hi

Yeah, the original video is horizontally rendered and I need to have it vertical so it works on a tv. I found a perfect solution. I will use a PC and VLC player to play it on the tv as it can rotate the video.

Thanks for suggestions.
rs170a wrote on 6/4/2012, 4:50 AM
Why not use Pan/Crop as suggested? That way, you don't have to worry about anyone else watching it and not knowing how to do what you're doing.

Mike
Chienworks wrote on 6/4/2012, 4:52 AM
How do you use Pan/Crop without rendering the result? Unless, of course, you always play it in Vegas?
TheHappyFriar wrote on 6/4/2012, 5:51 AM
I'm confused: does he mean not rendering an output file or does he mean preview render?
Chienworks wrote on 6/4/2012, 7:44 AM
Since the desire is to have an output file that can be played i don't see how preview has anything to do with it.
TheHappyFriar wrote on 6/4/2012, 11:11 AM
Oh, so it's a display question not an editing question. Not sure why you would want to play a raw captured file though, if it were me I'd render to WMV/MPEG-2, or something else that could be accelerated to keep better playback speed.

My ATI drivers allow me to rotate my output. I'd assume his "better" Nvidia should be able to do the same thing. :)