@@denisemcgill6260 without knowing your program, heres my thinking - it starts suddenly and extends across several clips, and stops short of your outro, so definitely isn't something on the clips themselves. I guess you have a "special effects" layer (track?) where you'll find it. That track could be thin, have that open/close on it, and likely would look similar to a clip or audio for start/end/moving. My guess that Either, accidently got a dimming effect added that extended to the end and you added your outro last. Or, if your outro "sits on top of context" with background dim that dim got accidently extended, and the start was added last (or it snapped to the nearest clip accidently). I hope that helps get you a step closer!
@@generrosity The outro is separate and it makes sense that whatever happened didn't touch it. I'm an artist, not a video expert so I'm only guessing at this stuff and playing around mostly. It is possible I hit an effects track without knowing it. I just couldn't figure out how to get out of it. I had hoped that once it rendered it would clear up but, obviously, it didn't. I'll have to really search to find where I goofed up. Thanks for the advice. I really appreciate it. So glad you liked my work enough to struggle through my glaring errors. Have a great day.
Nice walk thought of your technique 😊 Just incase you didn't know, at the video cut [1:26] the video dips in brightness until your end sequence
I noticed that and can't figure out why that is or how to correct it. Have you any ideas?
@@denisemcgill6260 without knowing your program, heres my thinking - it starts suddenly and extends across several clips, and stops short of your outro, so definitely isn't something on the clips themselves. I guess you have a "special effects" layer (track?) where you'll find it. That track could be thin, have that open/close on it, and likely would look similar to a clip or audio for start/end/moving.
My guess that Either, accidently got a dimming effect added that extended to the end and you added your outro last. Or, if your outro "sits on top of context" with background dim that dim got accidently extended, and the start was added last (or it snapped to the nearest clip accidently).
I hope that helps get you a step closer!
@@generrosity The outro is separate and it makes sense that whatever happened didn't touch it. I'm an artist, not a video expert so I'm only guessing at this stuff and playing around mostly. It is possible I hit an effects track without knowing it. I just couldn't figure out how to get out of it. I had hoped that once it rendered it would clear up but, obviously, it didn't. I'll have to really search to find where I goofed up. Thanks for the advice. I really appreciate it. So glad you liked my work enough to struggle through my glaring errors. Have a great day.
The future belongs to the brave.
So true!