

- #What video format is best for premiere pro 720p
- #What video format is best for premiere pro code
- #What video format is best for premiere pro trial
- #What video format is best for premiere pro windows

He also sent me this response as to how he sends in HQ videos to YouTube. Jake Ludington has a good article about this on his site. Unfortunately, that means most of the 320x240 videos will never look very good. YouTube is changing its video setup to allow a High Quality video to be shown if you submit it in that format. Leaving the aspect set to square pixels seems to work well, too. See for yourself at youtube, username stanarthur.ĭepending on the format of the source video, I've been known to change the frame rate from 29.97 to 23.97, or from lower field (NTSC) to progressive.
#What video format is best for premiere pro windows
Hey, it gives me the opportunity to use my PrE, even if it's just in the role of a converter.My best success so far has been windows media format at 1024 kbps. Most of those were in DivX, or Xvid, but when 4:5 are perfect, and one random one is not, I am at a loss to explain the differences. I'd guess that this happens with about 2% of the files. PrE sees it correctly 100% of the time, and the immediate Export to the same exact settings has been 100% perfect every time. Same size, same exact reports in G-Spot, and even DupeFile Finder says that they are identical byte-for-byte, but something IS different, and PrPro gets hung up on the Duration.

I have checked and re-checked everything, and both files spec. I found that if I Import that one file into PrE, and then do an Export to the exact same CODEC and settings, that file will have the proper Duration in PrPro. On occasion, one will Import into PrPro with the wrong Duration, say 00 45 00, when it should be 30 30 00. I'll be given a group of 5 Clips, all with the same CODEC. The only issue that I have ever had is with the Duration on some files. I like to focus on what works for me, and then will stick to that. Since I bought this one, I have not tried any of the newer ones out there.

I do not know how the newer version works, but so long as they have not mucked things up, it should just have more "features," and probably a bit more speed.
#What video format is best for premiere pro code
I have not yet upgraded to their new one, though I do have my multi-license promo code - just lazy and doing other things.
#What video format is best for premiere pro trial
When the trial was up, the others got shelved, and I bought 3 licenses. I did their trail for about 30 days, and kept coming back to it. Some years back, I did try several others (names are now lost to history), and this one impressed me most. Having said all this, have you experimented with the "Display Output" quality setting in the Program Monitor? starting with the same type of footage that I expect to export at the end. If it were me, I think I'd be aiming for a "straight through" workflow, i.e. If you havn't quite figured out what your output format is going to be and you need to "hedge your bets", I'd be tempted to convert everything to that "highest common demoninator" setting.Īgain, this is all theory, and I'll be very curious to hear your results. In other words, are you going to YouTube, to BluRay, to DVD? Once you've decided, then pick your project preset to suit, and lastly, batch convert your footage to that format. I'm just thinking out loud here, but I would probably first think about the format that I am most likely to OUTPUT. In terms of those "preview renders", the preview file format that Premiere is creating will depend on what project preset you're working in.Īs you point out, you use lots of different types of footage, so making sure that your project preset matches your footage is not a realistic option. Premiere actually has pretty good file format support so I'm actually a bit surprised that Premiere isn't playing nicely with file types that you've tried so far. lack of information for us to supply any informed suggestions to provide a "perfect" solution. I prefer AEFX for this work because of better scaling if it is required.īTW : problem was.
#What video format is best for premiere pro 720p
take them into AEFX or their own timelines in PPRO and export them as Uncompressed avi or movs (intermediates) to match your 720p Project. The conversions may or may not manage frame dimension or PAR isues so could get messy: where as. if you do not want to deal with random un matched clips in the timelineīecause we do not have any idea what yourr andom format files are this can only be asuggestion but what I would do is make intermediates. I forgot to mention my Premiere version (CS3 and 4 - either), but all I'm saying in my post is:Ģ) What's a good codec to convert them to, just for faster scrubbing? (and now, my setup: CS3 & 4, Vista 64)įor your 720p Project you need to find a way to make all the random files 720P. Shooternz, I have no idea what YOUR problem is.
