View Full Version : Too many presets! Can't see 'em all


Josh Bass
October 25th, 2007, 02:22 AM
This is a silly thing, but I can't figure it out.

I have Vegas 6.

On certain plugins (namely color corrector and color curves), I have so many presets that I can't see them all. I can't figure out a way to make it scroll to reveal the ones that are lower than the bottom of my screen, and it doesn't spill over into another column. I know the hidden ones are there 'cause when I was able to delete some from old projects, the new ones'd show up. I can use the arrow key to select them, but I can't see the names. Now I want to keep everything that's left. Anyone got a way around this?

Edward Troxel
October 25th, 2007, 07:26 AM
I believe only the first 50 show up. Beyond that you'd have to delete older ones to see newer ones.

Mike Kujbida
October 25th, 2007, 07:27 AM
If you have two or more chained together, you can save this as a preset, thereby freeing up room for more single ones.

Josh Bass
October 25th, 2007, 11:49 AM
Can you explain?

Mike Kujbida
October 25th, 2007, 01:25 PM
Can do!!

Open the Event FX and click the Plug-In Chain... button. It's the green + symbol to the far right of your FX chain.
This brings up the Plug-in Chooser - Video Event FX window.
Click Save As..., give it an appropriate name and click OK.
The next time you want to use this particular FX, open up the Event FX window, click on Filter Packages, look for the one you created and select it.

Josh Bass
October 25th, 2007, 03:04 PM
I'm not sure we're talking about the same thing here. What I mean is that when I open, say, color corrector, and then click the drop down box for the presets, I have so many that vertically they take up the entire screen, and I can't seem to scroll down to the ones "below the screen", or make them show up in any way other than deleting the ones that already exist.

Ian Stark
October 25th, 2007, 04:39 PM
Josh, I think what Mike is suggesting is good.

Select a 'less used' preset, save it as a filter package (see Mike's instructions) then delete it from your regular preset list. When you want to use those settings again, call it up in its new guise as a filter package (a filter package with one plugin in the chain).

Repeat as many times as you need until just your frequently used presets appear in the plugin preset dropdown.

(Shame that the presets drop down doesn't go to two or three or four columns as it grows, rather than cutting you off at 50.)

Ian Stark
October 25th, 2007, 04:43 PM
p.s. love the Blisterene commercial!

Josh Bass
October 25th, 2007, 05:27 PM
Ok, sorry, I didn't realize it saved the preset and the filter in a filter package. I think I'll make several packages and just have it be a chain of the same preset, and name them after what short film/collection they're from (Blisterine, Ultimate S, etc.)