They behave slightly differently, so you will need to experiment and see which works best for your personal use case. This can be used for green screens and similar stuff. Negative and positive values will change the direction in which your source will scroll and you can limit the height and width if necessary.īoth the Color Key and Chroma Key filter can be used to remove a certain color of your source and make it transparent. The scroll filter gives us the ability to give our text for example a scrolling effect, left-to-right and top-to-bottom. You can change the contrast, brightness and gamma of your source and even provide a color overlay. The crop filter should explain itself but in short it lets you cut off the top/left/right/bottom of your source/scene to only show the parts you want.Īgain, the name says it all. This can be used to give your webcam a round border for example: The Image Mask/Blend filter gives us the option to use the Color or Alpha Channel of an Image as a Mask or to Blend an Image (multiply, addition, subtraction) over your Scene or Source. But let me explain what the different filters allow you to do. You can add them by right-click your desired Scene, Source or Device and selecting "Filters" (for Audio Devices, click on the gear icon next to your device). The following filters are available in OBS Studio 23.0.0: Rename appropriately.In OBS Studio we have the ability to add filters to our Sources, Scenes and even our Audio Devices. CropVD is a function I created to have VDub style cropping (posted on doom9).Ġ3-run9b-tatt10-GaiaCG200-imgsrc-crop-denoise-resize-tweak.avs I used Bicubic as Lanczos over-sharpened. In the following script, I used QTGMC a second time to remove noise as the settings in the pre script don’t denoise. In Vdub, no audio, compress video with x264-8bit ABR 5742Kbps Placebo, Film, 元.1, YUV 4:2:0, SAR W=1 H=1, FD and ZL unchecked. Avisynth has equiv functions, but I couldn’t get them to work as well as VDub’s filters. png images to a folder (run9, I actually did ~15 runs of VEAI before I found the best settings). QTGMC( Preset=“Slow”, EZKeepGrain=0.1, SourceMatch=2, Lossless=2, Sharpness=0.1, Sbb=0 )Ġ2b-tatt10-crop8,0,-8,-8-addborders8,4,8,4-qtgmc-lag.aviĪdd horizontal resolution (in theory) with Topaz Video Enhance AI 1.6.1. flac this way (from the cropped huffy-pcm.avi), good AV sync is assured.Ĭrop without changing framesize (important per several guides, makes no sense to me).
Use MkvMerge 9.6 (9.7-10.0 have data corruption issues) to create a.
Warpsharp 2 filter video full#
Full process audio from stream 1 (tatt10.avi), Compress with PCM. Scripts using Avisynth 2.6 32bit opened in Virtualdub2 b44282 32bit (on XP SP3 or Win7 64bit).Ĭonvert to 23.976fps from 29.97fps. Format and reinstall OS (XP SP3) and everything if any dropped or added frames… This took 10 tries before it worked properly.
Warpsharp 2 filter video Pc#
Use HVR-1150 built in audio input (not PC sound card). These are my notes for the process and every decision was made by first asking, what will this do to the quality? Modify to suite your particular case:Ĭapture at 720x480 29.97fps with Virtualdub 1.8.7. I’m glad I used only a light touch of it. I really don’t like the way Warpsharp changes the video. If I were to do it again, I might omit Warpsharp and instead try vsMSharpen. The noise levels were surprisingly low and only QTGMC in the post VEAI script was necessary. VHS spec is 250 lines horizontal which I think means 500 pixels. Artemis MQv9 might find some more horizontal detail, but as is it looks great to me, so I’m not revisiting this one. This was done before VEAI 1.8.0 was released. The original cap I did in 2009 and is mostly noise and I can’t believe I used to consider that quality ok… Here’s the process for an improved capture of Time At The Top (1999) I recently did using a recently serviced prosumer S-VHS editing deck with TBC (Time Base Corrector)- the Panasonic AG-1980, and a newer capture card- a Hauppauge HVR-1150.