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Activity Forums Adobe Premiere Pro How can I do this in Premiere?

  • How can I do this in Premiere?

    Posted by Alegator on August 29, 2006 at 10:29 pm

    I have this 2 hour, 26Gb DV-AVI NTSC file that I captured using Premiere Pro 2. Now I want to create movie clips (16 in total) using Premiere. The way I did it is by dragging the captured file onto the Source monitor, marking the In and Out points for a given clip, drag the marked clip from the Source monitor onto the Timeline Sequence and then File/Export/Movie…, doing this 16 times for each of the 16 clips marked. Now my question is: is there a way of doing this in a one-click process? For example, is it possible to mark ALL In and Out points for all 16 clips simultaneously and then somehow have Premiere generate all correspopnding movie clips in a single sesssion? If so, how? Thanks.

    Alegator replied 19 years, 8 months ago 3 Members · 7 Replies
  • 7 Replies
  • Craig Howard

    August 30, 2006 at 1:24 am

    Convert in and out points to subclips then use Project Manger to convert them to “unique” avis.

    Craig Howard
    Shooter Film Company
    Auckland
    New Zealand

    (Premiere Pro 1.5 / Matrox TRX100 XTreme Pro)

  • Alegator

    August 30, 2006 at 4:04 am

    then use Project Manger to convert them to “unique” avis
    Could you detail the steps to do this? Thanks!

  • Alex Udell

    August 30, 2006 at 7:35 pm

    That’s a good one!!!!

    Thanks for that!!

    Alex

  • Craig Howard

    August 30, 2006 at 9:15 pm

    Put your long source clip into a new project and place it in the Source Window.

    Mark In and Out Points (“I” and “O”) and make a subclip (there is a shortcut key “CTRL-T” I think from memory). Use a naming protocol that suits the clip.

    Do this for each clip ( 16 in your case). The subclips end up in the Project Window. Put the them all on the timeline.

    Go to Project Manager in the menu bar and follow the instructions (very straight forward and simple). It will create a new trimmed project and at the same time create a unique clip (with handles if you choose)from all the subclips and put them in a folder of your choice. The source media you have not “used” (sub clipped) will not be available to that project.

    Craig Howard
    Shooter Film Company
    Auckland
    New Zealand

    (Premiere Pro 1.5 / Matrox TRX100 XTreme Pro)

  • Alegator

    August 30, 2006 at 10:10 pm

    Another way would be to batch export subclips to movies, is this possible in Premiere? Final Cut Pro has the batch export for clip rendering.

  • Craig Howard

    August 30, 2006 at 10:42 pm

    Not possible with PremPro (no batch export)

    Craig Howard
    Shooter Film Company
    Auckland
    New Zealand

    (Premiere Pro 1.5 / Matrox TRX100 XTreme Pro)

  • Alegator

    August 30, 2006 at 11:38 pm

    Craig, I just tested your suggested method and it’s great, it does render all 16 clips in a single click. Unfortunately the few last clips still show A/V Synch issues. I will try doing the same with other software that I tested and that do not create a A/V Synch issue when rendering (I tested Ulead Media Studio Pro and VirtualDub)

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