Creative Communities of the World Forums

The peer to peer support community for media production professionals.

Activity Forums VEGAS Pro Need to render out timeline to be used in Adobe Pre Pro – what settings best

  • Need to render out timeline to be used in Adobe Pre Pro – what settings best

    Posted by Don Cobble on October 17, 2014 at 6:20 pm

    I have footage shot 1920×1080 59.94 Progressive scan Square .mp4 – Panasonic camera.
    Need to send rendered timeline file to someone to edit in adobe Pre Pro.

    Was wondering what is best to send for no re-compression (if possible)?
    or if not:
    What format would be best intermediary:
    XAVC? XAVCs? or Cineform Pro AVI? or any sugestion???

    Thank You
    Don

    PC 1
    I7 2.8 Ghz 8GB Ram
    Win 7 Pro 64bit OS
    PNY Quadro K2000
    PC 2
    I7 3930K 3.2Ghz
    32 GB Ram
    Win 7 Pro 64bit OS
    PNY Quadro 4000

    3-4 TB HD
    Vegas 10 64bit & Vegas 11 64Bit & Vegas 12 & Adobe Production Premium CS5.5.2 & Avid Media Composer 5.5

    Camera
    Sony EX1 shoot in 1920×1080 30P

    Russ Froze replied 11 years, 7 months ago 2 Members · 3 Replies
  • 3 Replies
  • Russ Froze

    October 18, 2014 at 6:13 pm

    Try using a .mov (Quicktime 7) wrapper and encode Avid DNxHD. Now you are absolutely certain that your file is 1920×1080 59.94 Progressive?
    Russ

  • Don Cobble

    October 18, 2014 at 8:27 pm

    It shows up in the project properties as
    1920×1080 59.940 fps
    field order None (Progressive Scan)
    1.000 (Square)
    Frame Rate: 59.940 (double NTSC)
    I understand it is 50 mbps data rate

    That is all I know about it?

    PC 1
    I7 2.8 Ghz 8GB Ram
    Win 7 Pro 64bit OS
    PNY Quadro K2000
    PC 2
    I7 3930K 3.2Ghz
    32 GB Ram
    Win 7 Pro 64bit OS
    PNY Quadro 4000

    3-4 TB HD
    Vegas 10 64bit & Vegas 11 64Bit & Vegas 12 & Adobe Production Premium CS5.5.2 & Avid Media Composer 5.5

    Camera
    Sony EX1 shoot in 1920×1080 30P

  • Russ Froze

    October 18, 2014 at 11:10 pm

    Well the odd things is that frame rate is the typical output of a interlaced signal from 29.97 Interlaced so that it will display on Television or monitors that need an interlaced input. Interlacing or deinterlacing footage is important if you are concerned about image quality. Since the project is to be re-edited and take a visual hit by rendering it yet again it’s best to have the cleanest presine footage to begin with. Watch Eric D Francs quick overview on interlacing https://vimeo.com/1513146.
    Fred Froze

    Some contents or functionalities here are not available due to your cookie preferences!

    This happens because the functionality/content marked as “Vimeo framework” uses cookies that you choosed to keep disabled. In order to view this content or use this functionality, please enable cookies: click here to open your cookie preferences.

We use anonymous cookies to give you the best experience we can.
Our Privacy policy | GDPR Policy