-
Premiere Pro render quality compared to FCP7/X, has anyone else done a comparison?
I’ve used the trial version and was almost convinced this is a suitable replacement for FCP, but I think the render quality of Premiere Pro isn’t as good, or I am making a mistake in render settings. (I had maximum quality enabled and didn’t use any preview renders). Unfortunately my trial period is over so I can’t test this any further. Or is it the trial which outputs limited quality?
I’ve tried this specifically with the IMX codec, since that is what most of our deliverables consist of. Put something in the timeline, render and then put it in a new timeline and render. Try this a couple of generations. I already see really bad artifacts at the 3rd generation. In FCP I can do 10 generations and not see artifacts, the color information offcourse will get less and less. But even that seems to keep up better in FCP. With ProRes the problems seem less, because it’s a much better codec, but the output of Premiere is still not as good as FCP.
Our company adapts foreign language series and movies to Dutch. So most of our video work is titling and creating new deliverables. After the title sequence I want to pass the rest of program untouched. FCP is able to re-wrap video if the video is just straight cuts and the output codec matches the material in the timeline. It just copies those parts to the new file if you choose not to re-render all frames.
This might not be a problem for someone that edits a commercial, a TV show or a feature, as the material in the timeline is probably the original footage and then the output is just one generation, but for us this isn’t useful and that’s a pity because I think the titling capabilities of Premiere are awesome. I know Adobe representatives are reading this forum so I hope they take note of this.
Ingesting uncompressed is not an option for us with the amount of content that we process. Also our current workflow is working fine, because we ingest with the deliverables in mind.