Forum Replies Created

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  • Mikkell Khan

    January 17, 2009 at 5:08 pm in reply to: Can premiere pro do a quality cross dissolve?

    Furthermore, if you right click on your keyframes, you have the option of making them bezier as they are natively in Final Cut Pro. Therefore, giving you more control over the seamlessness of the transition and not having it be so cut and dry as a linear default.

  • Mikkell Khan

    January 14, 2009 at 2:14 am in reply to: Premiere Pro CS 3 Takes a long time to load projects

    I think I’ve found a solution. It seems that premiere takes a while when there are a lot of clips, and a few single clips totaling the same length as smaller clips actually takes less time. Maybe it has something to do with creating the file structure for the project when its opened.

    However, a solution would be to capture footage in intervals if you do not want to capture the entire thing in fear of dropped frames. I’d recommend 15 minute intervals. And then go through the footage in premiere and make sub clips of the footage as you would have if you were making automated clips whilst capturing.

    Not the best fix but it is working for me and I’ll most likely use it in future projects.

  • Mikkell Khan

    January 11, 2009 at 5:31 pm in reply to: editing from mega-footage

    https://www.dvdfab.com/download.htm

    Try DVDFab

    Or Try Total Video Converter, I use that one for DVD to MPEG converter.

  • Mikkell Khan

    January 9, 2009 at 10:58 pm in reply to: ‘Woosh’ transition in Premiere

    Thanks. Makes sense. I will test this out.

  • Mikkell Khan

    January 9, 2009 at 10:51 pm in reply to: Premiere Pro CS 3 Takes a long time to load projects

    Pssst…any takers?

    Its slightly annoying having a project take so long to load.

  • Mikkell Khan

    January 9, 2009 at 10:49 pm in reply to: Organizing Captured and Trimmed Footage

    That’s so strange. But its working flawlessly for me.

    All I do is set my in and out points on the file preview footage (not the timeline footage) then click and hold on the visuals of that footage and drag across to a blank spot in the window where it shows all the files you have in that project and it asks me to name my new subclip.

  • Mikkell Khan

    January 7, 2009 at 1:38 am in reply to: Organizing Captured and Trimmed Footage

    Set your in and out points, drag and drop the clip (the visual, not the bar) into the project files area. You’ll be allowed to create a subclip that will stand independent of the full footage.

    Hope this answers your question.

  • Mikkell Khan

    January 4, 2009 at 11:35 pm in reply to: Premiere Pro CS 3 Takes a long time to load projects

    Two sequences, both 4 minutes long.

    Source Clips are about 140 clips to accumulate the 2 hours of footage.

    The media drives are 29% full.

    I just did a defrag and optimize on them using smart defrag. Never did it before though.

    Trying to load the project now. It seems to still be taking the same amount of time as before.

  • Mikkell Khan

    November 13, 2008 at 12:13 pm in reply to: Editing M2T files in Premiere CS3

    Ok sorry about that. the media seems to have been indexing and was not accessible until this was finished.

    However, I don’t seem to be getting any sound.

  • Mikkell Khan

    October 17, 2008 at 2:59 am in reply to: Creating a slug in Premiere Pro

    Ok, one more question. If I wanted to blur out someone’s face, and have the circle blurry effect over their head. How do I achieve that? (basically I want to know how to insert an item native to premiere pro that is not just a square or rectangular shape) or would I have to create a slug that is square and then use stuff like radial gradient to create that kind of effect?

    Sorry for all the questions, I just want to completely be independant of final cut pro as these are things I could normally do in that program.

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