Issue- Perspective crop is creating lines in the video that is rendered in that window or rendered to final output, using either software or hardware rendering
Adobe Premiere Pro version number: Anything beyond 24.0.3
Operating system -Windows 11
System Info: CPU, GPU, RAM, HD:
Dual Xeon Gold 6148 CPU at 2.40 GHz
GPU and Driver Version: NVidia RTX A4500 Driver Version 537.58 85 GB
128 GB
> 1TB SSD Free
Video format: File Path: N:\2023-12-22 19-15-29.mp4 Type: MPEG Movie File Size: 48.24 MB Image Size: 3840 x 2160 Frame Rate: 59.94 Source Audio Format: 48000 Hz - Compressed - Stereo Project Audio Format: 48000 Hz - 32 bit floating point - Stereo Total Duration: 00:01:20:43 Pixel Aspect Ratio: 1.0 Alpha: None Color Space: Rec. 709 Color Space Override: Off Input LUT: None Video Codec Type: MP4/MOV H.264 4:2:0
Workflow details: The sequence is an overlay graphic on a main sequence with perspective crop.
Steps to reproduce- (Very important!) Bring a video into a sequence and perform a perspective crop. This crop will show multiple vertical lines. The proxy/preview will show lines and the final render will also contain these lines. This also appears with the same version of Media Encoder when encoding the file. Fix: use version 24.1 or earlier but later than 24.0.3. This has also been reported in the Community Forum circa this past December. One person reported that adding additional effects before and after (Transparency and Invert) solved this, but it did not for me.
Expected result- When reverting to version 24.0.3 of Premiere (and Media Encoder) the issue does not appear.
Actual result- Version 24.1 still shows this bug. Perspective crop apparently uses software and not hardware encoding and since the bug appears after 24.0.3 it seems Adobe introduced this bug after 24.0.3.
BugUnresolved
TOPICS
Editing and playback
,
Export
,
Graphics
,
Performance or Stability
It was not working in the beta on the day of that posting. Nor was it acknowledged as a bug, hence my posting which said exactly which version it needs to be reverted to in order to work.