Forum Replies Created

  • Victor Van dijk

    May 10, 2014 at 9:36 pm in reply to: Client requires ProRes, and I’m on Windows

    Hello Ryan Simmons,

    I have tried out Cinemartin Cinec Plin (https://www.cinemartin.com/cinec/plin/) on my Windows 8.1 computer, a brand new plugin for Premiere Pro, and I have to say, it works like a treat for encoding to any broadcast quality format, among which all ‘flavours’ of ProRes 422. With the plugin installed (just read through the short manual on how to do that), from within Premiere Pro you can just select the timeline, goto File –> Export, and select the Cinemartin Cinec Plin. You then get to see the plugin in which you can set the ProRes 422 settings, the frame rate, and the aspect ratio. Once you’ve done that, you click Encode and the encoding begins. That’s all there is to it 🙂

    All the best,

    Victor van Dijk

  • Victor Van dijk

    May 10, 2014 at 8:30 pm in reply to: Cinemartin Cinec Plin

    Hi Chris Paul,

    I also just bought the Cinemartin Cinec Plin Pro, and am really pleased with it since it does exactly what it says. I first tried out the demo version which converts up to 10 sec. only and then completely stops converting, but still did a good job for that time.

    I was looking for a plugin or tool to convert to all ‘tastes’ of ProRes from within Premiere Pro on a Windows 8.1 machine, being able to save into that format. And I think Cinec Plin is easy to operate and works well. I never heard of Cinemartin before, but think it’s as you wrote a professional, small company that deserves our attention and also I’ve been given great personal service even now it’s weekend.

    And I don’t know if this is expensive for a high end, professional conversion plugin, I’ve seen much more expensive ones?

    Let’s keep an eye on Cinemartin!

    All the best,

    Victor van Dijk.

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