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Activity Forums Adobe Premiere Pro Getting Still images from footage

  • Getting Still images from footage

    Posted by David Lord on January 16, 2014 at 3:32 am

    Hi all, I’m trying to save some still images from video in a project i’m working on. I’m using the “export frame” button from the project window, but when I save the image, some colors are off for some reason. For example there are some green patches on the blue sky, stuff like that. Anyone know how to get around that? thanks!

    Richard Herd replied 12 years, 4 months ago 4 Members · 9 Replies
  • 9 Replies
  • Tero Ahlfors

    January 16, 2014 at 4:41 am

    What is your source footage and what format are you saving it to?

  • David Lord

    January 16, 2014 at 4:49 am

    Its avchd, (converted to dnxhd). I’m exporting to jpeg. I tried other formats too though and the same thing happened.

  • David Lord

    January 16, 2014 at 4:57 am

    Here’s an example of what I mean. The first photo is my original footage, the second is the exported frame with the weird patchy colors:

  • Al Bergstein

    January 16, 2014 at 4:49 pm

    Strange. I’ve exported hundreds of JPGs, as recently as yesterday, and not seen this. You on a Mac or W7 machine? Have you seen this same phenomenom with AVCHD footage shot on this same camera before? What version of Pr are you running?

    Al

  • Richard Herd

    January 17, 2014 at 10:55 pm

    CS6 (I’m not sure if the previous versions have it) has a nifty feature that I use a lot.

    On the far right is a camera icon. Click that. Save it as a TIFF.

  • David Lord

    January 17, 2014 at 11:10 pm

    hey, thats what I am using. I didn’t get a chance to test out any regular AVCHD footage without converting it to DNxHD to see if that helps. For now I’m just using screen captures from my mac.

  • Richard Herd

    January 20, 2014 at 5:54 pm

    Why did you convert the footage?

  • Tero Ahlfors

    January 23, 2014 at 8:20 am

    [Richard Herd] “Why did you convert the footage?”

    I’d guess because AVCHD is one of the worst codecs in terms of performance.

  • Richard Herd

    January 28, 2014 at 10:30 pm

    As long as (a) the Media Browser points to the camera archive (and not just the .mts for example), then PP does very well with AVCHD, and (b) the scratch disk is fast, then it does fine.

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