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Activity Forums Adobe Premiere Pro Editing Together Different HD Formats

  • Editing Together Different HD Formats

    Posted by Kyle1852 on April 12, 2007 at 7:26 pm

    I’m about to edit an HD video made up of stock HD footage. Since the footage came from different sources, however, the clips are all different HD formats. The project will be output in 720p 23.976 fps. I have footage ranging from 1080p to 1080i to 720p, and in different fps (though most are already 23.976). Luckily, they are all 16:9 with 1.0 pixel aspect ratio, and almost all Quicktime with Photo JPEG codec.

    I know NLEs scale pretty poorly. So my question is, how should I go about this? Should I just drop all the footage in Premiere Pro with the sequence set to the settings I want? Or do I need to process each clip in After Effects to get them all in the same format?

    I appreciate any feedback…thanks for your help!

    Kyle1852 replied 19 years, 1 month ago 3 Members · 7 Replies
  • 7 Replies
  • Steven L. gotz

    April 12, 2007 at 8:41 pm

    I had an answer, argued with myself, lost the argument, consulted my inner child, and still had trouble deciding what to tell you.

    Scaling from 1080 to 720 is not usually that bad. You might find that you like certain parts of the 1080 footage frames better than others and you might want to adjust to center the best part of the larger frame into the smaller frame size.

    As long as you make that decision in After Effects before exporting it to be used in Premiere Pro, I believe that you will be happier converting everything to match in After Effects. I don’t believe that the generational loss will be as big a problem as trying to deal with different footage might be.

    Only you can check it and find out for yourself. Play with a couple of different clips. One with lots of motion. One with very little. If it looks good, do it that way.

  • Kyle1852

    April 13, 2007 at 3:35 am

    OK…so I will use After Effects to scale my 1080 clips down to 720. I’ll experiment to see what looks best.

    What is the best way to bring down the framerate? Most of my clips are in 23.976, but I have a few in 30fps and 25fps. Under the playback settings (under project settings) in Premiere Pro there is a choice for “24p Conversion Method.” Should I just bring the clips into PP and have it scale the framerate for me (option “Repeat Frame ABBCD” or “Interlaced Frame 2:3:3:2,” I suspect Repeat Frame…), or should I use something like Magic Bullet in After Effects?

    Also, what is the best way to convert interlaced frames to progressive? Similar approach to lowering the framerate?

    Thanks so much in advance!!

    Kyle

  • Steven L. gotz

    April 13, 2007 at 1:47 pm

    I don’t know for sure, but if I were you, I would start by making the frame size, frame rate, and deinterlacing issues happen during export from After Effects. Do it all there. If that looks good to you, then great. If not, then you might need to do the work inside AE instead of just during the export.

    Steven
    https://www.stevengotz.com

  • Scott Hathaway

    April 13, 2007 at 5:39 pm

    If you’re curious to know how to match frame rates in After Effects, Andrew Kramer just posted a nifty tutorial on how to use one of his designed effects to convert one frame rate to another and back again.

    https://forums.creativecow.net/cgi-bin/new_page_wrapper.cgi?forumid=1&page=https://www.creativecow.net/articles/kramer_andrew/fps/index.html

    It’s not “wow” impressive like he said, but it’s geeky and effective!

  • Steven L. gotz

    April 13, 2007 at 7:40 pm

    I said “Wow!” when I saw it. But then, I m a geek.

    I missed that tutorial. I watch all his podcasts, but I must have missed some tutorials.

    Steven
    https://www.stevengotz.com

  • Steven L. gotz

    April 13, 2007 at 7:45 pm

    Whoops. I meant I watch all of “the” podcasts, not “his” podcasts. I don’t want to have people looking all over for something that does not exist.

    Steven
    https://www.stevengotz.com

  • Kyle1852

    April 16, 2007 at 7:03 pm

    Thanks so much for all your help…my converted clips look great now!

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