Jacob Rosenberg
Forum Replies Created
-
Jacob Rosenberg
January 17, 2006 at 5:51 pm in reply to: What exactly is Media Management? (Premiere is lacking this….people say)Media Management can be defined a number of ways, but to put it simply:
Media Management is an architecture in which all your clips that have been captured can be tracked, located, tagged with meta data, etc. Additionally, all your projects can be tracked as to what clips are being used. It is, in essence a way in which you can better protect the files you have on disk from becoming too fragmented (from a project standpoint)and a way in which the media used with your projects can be easily transported from one to another.
With Avid, you never really see the clip you captured to disk, with the name you assigned during capture, that is because the way that it manages media is by assigning unique tags to every clip so that it can track it internally. Premiere Pro and FCP operate much different than this and are inherently behind the curve when it comes to more efficient methods of media management. I am sure someone else could add more or correct me on a few points.
jacobhttp://www.premiereprotraining.com
http://www.formikafilms.com
http://www.d2gfilm.com -
Jacob Rosenberg
January 17, 2006 at 5:46 pm in reply to: Has 2.0 changed 1.5 import limitation on drop and non drop frame same time line?Happy to help. I have been working intensley with the product for a while now and I want to make sure things don’t “spin” out of control. It certainly isn’t the end all be all, yet, but it’s a great step forward!
Jacob
http://www.premiereprotraining.com
http://www.formikafilms.com
http://www.d2gfilm.com -
Jacob Rosenberg
January 17, 2006 at 5:38 pm in reply to: Has 2.0 changed 1.5 import limitation on drop and non drop frame same time line?This does suck, I will be the first to admit it.
However, if you need to trim just one sequence, COPY your project and delete all the sequences from the new project that you aren’t going to trim (nothing happens to the media on disk).
Then run the project trimmer. It is a workaround and it should be better, but that is an option.jacob
http://www.premiereprotraining.com
http://www.formikafilms.com
http://www.d2gfilm.com -
Jacob Rosenberg
January 17, 2006 at 5:36 pm in reply to: Has 2.0 changed 1.5 import limitation on drop and non drop frame same time line?I don’t follow you.
jacobhttp://www.premiereprotraining.com
http://www.formikafilms.com
http://www.d2gfilm.com -
You can have two timelines open in Premiere Pro, you just need to have them in separate windows (now panels), you can easily drag and drop between the two.
The Timeline to BIN is not in 2.0. I would hope to see that in a later version.jacob
http://www.premiereprotraining.com
http://www.formikafilms.com
http://www.d2gfilm.com -
Jacob Rosenberg
January 17, 2006 at 5:15 pm in reply to: Has 2.0 changed 1.5 import limitation on drop and non drop frame same time line?You can use mixed codes in the project, some timecode will open DF and others NDF. There is a preference to make sure you always display the source format. When you export an EDL, the EDL will callout the Dropness of the referenced clip.
YOu now capture only individual clips and have the option of assigning handles to those batch captured clips (you previously couldn’t do this).jacob
http://www.premiereprotraining.com
http://www.formikafilms.com
http://www.d2gfilm.com -
Yes,
you will just need to razor the start and stop camera so it can be spread across the main camera in the timeline. If you assign a new Numbered Marker for each sync point that the two clips share, you can sync each short clip to different sections of the long clip.jacob
http://www.premiereprotraining.com
http://www.formikafilms.com
http://www.d2gfilm.com -
Jacob Rosenberg
January 17, 2006 at 5:03 pm in reply to: 24p Basic and PP2.0 – tell me the flicker is fixed?The 24p flicker is gone with 2.0 and additionally, there is a flicker removal slider in the effects control that allows you to reduce any flickering or shimmering that comes from animating still images. The previous 24p issue has been resolved in 2.0.
jacob
http://www.premiereprotraining.com
http://www.formikafilms.com
http://www.d2gfilm.com -
Before you nest your Source Multi-Cam sequence you can use the Alignment tools to line everything up AND timecode is just one method of alignment. The other methods are auto align at In Point, Out Point, Numbered Marker and Timecode.
The workflow would be to first align the material, then nest it and activate it as a MultiCam Sequence.Jacob
http://www.premiereprotraining.com
http://www.formikafilms.com
http://www.d2gfilm.com -
You can have multiple timelines with a single project, however they will all adhere to the project settings dictated by your selection when you created the project. So, you cannot have an HD and HDV timeline in the same project, but you can have multiple HD timelines or HDV timelines in those respective projects.
Jacob
http://www.premiereprotraining.com
http://www.formikafilms.com
http://www.d2gfilm.com