Retro Vision Pro - Studio-quality emulation of 80s/90s video.

Retro Vision Pro VHS & CRT VFX is the best classic, film-accurate post-processing suite for a fantastic old-school CRT/VHS aesthetic.

FAB LINK

Effects Video Showcase | Website | Documentation

Demo Scene

The pack includes 16 post process materials:

  • PAL *Bleed – PAL-style color bleed and soft channel offset.

  • VHS *Bleed – stronger VHS chroma bleed and edge glow.

  • NTSC *Bleed – classic NTSC horizontal color bleed, where colors soften and leak across scanlines.

  • NTSC Codec – film-accurate NTSC composite signal emulation with authentic color bleed, chroma smearing, and scanline interaction.

  • Signal Noise – analog signal interference and shimmer.

  • Film Grain – film-like grain overlay for softer, less digital images.

  • Tape Jitter – horizontal jitter by scanline plus slight vertical wander. Emulates time-base jitter common to consumer decks.

  • VHS Stretch – moving horizontal bands that locally stretch or compress the picture. Imitates tape time-base errors.

  • VHS Horizontal Jitter – simulates horizontal sync instability: image rows wobble left–right, like a mis-tracked VHS tape.

  • VHS Vertical Jitter – offsets the frame along the Y-axis over time, recreating classic vertical roll and wobble from old video.

  • VHS Twitch Horizontal – short horizontal twitch/glitch bursts.

  • VHS Twitch Vertical – vertical twitching and partial frame shifts.

  • Line Noise – thin, moving horizontal noise lines across the frame.

  • Tape Noise – Head-switching noise and intermittent line artifacts typical of VHS and U-Matic playback.

  • Fisheye Vignette - Emulates a real CRT screen by bending image corners with adjustable parameters.

  • Scanline effect - Classic scanlines with optional barrel and spherical distortion.

*Color Bleed is the effect seen on video tapes where strong colors seem to spread out from their correct places and bleed into adjacent areas.

Hello @debrice2468 !

This is such an amazing creation. I personally adore these very nostalgic visuals. However, I never knew much about what they were actually called. I’m super fond of the variety you showcase here and will most certainly be sharing this among my developer circles as a huge pickup for retro-style items.

Can’t wait to see what you do next! Keep up the AMAZING work! :star_struck: