

In 8-bit image (we'll use a greyscale example to simplify) this means the black pixel is at 0, and the brightest pixel is 255 (2 8 = 256) with 254 possible values in-between. Imagine that you have a gradient of tones from the brightest possible white, to the darkest black. Banding is where subtle gradients run into the limits of the bit-depth in the codec, often amplified by artifacts from compression. This cut my troubleshooting time down considerably, as I didn't have to keep exporting footage. They do not appear if I haven't pressed "Render In to Out". The flickering lines then appear when I preview the timeline. I did learn that I can replicate the issue just by setting In and Out points on the timeline and rendering inside Premiere i.e by going to Sequence > Render In to Out. Rendering the same footage on a Macbook (I usually work on a PC).Installing an older version of Premiere, downgrading the project, and rendering out of the older version.avi, very high bitrates, CBR, playing with every encoding settings Rendering the project in every imaginable way i.e.


I am working on documentation of a performance/musical instrument design project I completed in the springtime.
