So you have to Grade them to your preference to bring the colors back. They are to help mostly to get better DR, and they look flat and gray looking on their output. Most of the better cameras have what is called Logs in them. Grading is changing the coloring in the movie. What is grading?īTW, do you have a super duper high speed new computer? Do you find it requiring a great deal of resource? From all the research I have seen grading is more important than the camera! A great editor grader can turn junk to Gold. ![]() I am Way too old to learn 2 or 3 editors now. Oh and by the way the price is right, FREE!! I like the program a lot. I have no relationship with MAGIX, but I've been a happy Vegas Pro editor for more than 15 years now, and this looks like a great deal: A $600 video editor for $200 with a free upgrade to the next version. ![]() To promote the new launch of MAGIX Vegas Pro 14, you can buy MAGIX Vegas Pro 13 ( formerly known as Sony Vegas Pro 13 ) for $200 which is $400 off the regular price, and you get a free license for MAGIX Vegas Pro 14 when it arrives at the end of September. MAGIX Vegas Pro 14 is coming out at the end of September ( MAGIX bought almost all of Sony's audio and video apps ), so I am very keen to see what MAGIX will add to Vegas Pro. ![]() Most of the time I use Sony Vegas Pro ( I have 10+ years experience with it, and many things are faster to set up for me with Vegas ), I use Premiere for the very few things that might not be possible in Vegas, and I use Da Vinci Resolve for grading and advanced color correction. I use three editors: Sony Vegas Pro, Adobe Premiere, and Da Vinci Resolve
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