Nels Mclaughlin
Forum Replies Created
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Nels Mclaughlin
April 20, 2019 at 2:07 pm in reply to: Canon C300 MkII and external monitor via HDMII thought the same thing, so I checked and the camera frequency is set to 59.94. Maybe stupid question – the inputs on the TV say 60Hz. I know drop frame doesnt equal non-drop frame, but could this be the issue?
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I was having the same issues with shorter clips (2-3 minutes in length), but found a solution.
You have to delete the .pek files associated with your clips from your media cache. To figure out where your media cache is located, you have to go to the Premiere Pro CC Menu // Media Cache and then find the location of your Media Cache Database (not the Media Cache Files…although mine were the same). Navigate to that folder in the Finder (if you’re looking for the Library folder in the Finder, just head to the Go menu, hold down option and it will appear. Just click on it), and then inside the folder indicated in Premiere, go to the “Peak Files” folder. In there, you should be able to find the .pek files you need to delete. Just find them and delete them.
Go back to Premiere and close/quit the program. Once it’s finished shutting down the program, open your project again and Premiere will automatically re-cache and re-create the waveforms. Voila! Magic!
In case you couldn’t tell, I’m doing this on a Mac, but it should be the same process on a PC. This worked for me – hope it works for you, too!
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It’s a 44.1 kHz, 16-bit stereo WAV file. Licensed from an online stock music company as an MP3, converted to a WAV with QT7.
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Nels Mclaughlin
March 11, 2016 at 7:19 pm in reply to: Blowing animated smoke off a smoking tape gunIt was a consideration, but I share the studio with our staff photographer, so studio time is an issue. Its on the list to shoot next week when I have time, so if I can’t figure this part out by then, that’s the go-to.
FWIW, Turbulent Displace may be my answer, but it’s not what I had in mind initially.
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Nels Mclaughlin
March 11, 2016 at 6:55 pm in reply to: Blowing animated smoke off a smoking tape gunI don’t actually – it’s a little pricier than the ‘decision makers’ want to spend on something they know nothing about. Odd, I know.
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I’m having the same issues with Premiere Pro CC 2015.0.2 on El Capitan. I didn’t have any issues with Yosemite, but that’s probably because I updated Premiere and the OSX on the same day.
Are there any fixes yet? This is really annoying and it slows me down considerably.
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I just saw that this bug was included in the most recent update to PP CC 2015. You can check out the list of bug fixes and updates here: https://blogs.adobe.com/premierepro/2015/07/premiere-9-0-1.html
Let’s hope it fixes the problem!
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I was having these issues in PP CC 2014 and when I saw that they released CC 2015, I was hoping that would fix the weird scrolling issue. Unfortunately, it did not. I quit PP when it happens, which temporarily fixes it, but nothing I’ve done…including closing the sequence, deleting preferences…has been anything but a temporary solution.
Anyone found a real solution for this yet?
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Nels Mclaughlin
March 16, 2015 at 1:19 pm in reply to: How Do I Get Markers on Clip in Source Monitor to Show Up On Timeline?Jim Zons – I wasn’t having any luck with either method (expanding the track or clicking ‘show clip markers’) when I find this post. But, I got it working!
I’m guessing it’s a bug, but on my system (OSX 10.10.2, Adobe PP CC 8.2.0), I had to expand the track ever so slightly and the markers would show up. It actually was quite painful trying to get it just right – the only reason I even tried this was because when I wouldexpand the track, the markers would flash on quickly and then go away while I was expanding. I had to find the right spot and then leave the track as it was.
Hope this helps.
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Nels Mclaughlin
December 4, 2014 at 8:50 pm in reply to: Move custom settings and presets from CS6 to CCSort of embarrassed to mention how long I looked for those things and never thought to look in the Documents folder, even though I knew there was a Premiere folder in there. Thanks for pointing me in the right direction – this absolutely was the right answer.
The Title Styles were in there, too, so I’m all set. Thanks, Patrick.