Thanks Dave.
My intent is to master in 1080/24p.
Surely there must be someone who has tried to do this sort of mixing before I came along and figured-out a repeatable workflow, no?
I thought that one of the big selling points of Premiere for some time has been it’s ability to handle mixed sources on the same timeline?
My conceptual intent has been to do all of my editing and output at 1080/24p to preserve the quality of the highest-quality source, and to some degree to deliver a more cinematic ‘feel’.
you wrote:
“Get ALL your footage to play in sync before you do anything. ”
That sounds like standard procedure, but maybe I am missing your point.
Theoretically, it seems to me, that if a transcode is executed and the encoder is working, it should standardize the material, making sync a straightforward process. What am I missing?
you wrote:
“Good luck with that variable frame rate stuff…”
Thank you. 😛
You raise an interesting question I have had about terminology, namely this:
Are the phrases ‘variable bit rate’ and ‘variable frame rate’ used as interchangeable terms/concepts?
(Both the Sanyo AND the iPhone stuff is recorded with variable bit rates, but the formats settings on each indicate fixed frame rates, with exception to the ‘slo-mo’ and ‘time-lapse’ modes on the iPhone)
Or perhaps you are just referring the variants of frame rates among my sources?
you wrote:
“You may have to cut it into your multicam separately…”
I’m new-ish to Premire, but have been studying. I know Premiere has a feature called ‘Multicam’ which facilitates a particular proprietary workflow, as opposed to the more generic usage of multi-cam meaning “multiple simultaneous or synced camera sources.”
Would you be willing elaborating the procedure you have in mind there?
thanks for your thoughts.