This is a discussion on Rendering for HUGE screen Help needed! - Adobe Premiere ; Hi guys I need to edit some dvd recordings for work. I have movie clips as .vob files on a recordable DVD which i have copied to my hard drive. I then changed the file extension from .vob to ..mpg ...
Hi guys
I need to edit some dvd recordings for work.
I have movie clips as .vob files on a recordable DVD which i have
copied to my hard drive. I then changed the file extension from .vob to
..mpg to allow it to be imported into Adobe premiere 1.5 (windows xp).
I edited the movie into clips which appear on the adobe premiere
timeline and can be previewed as sequence before exporting as an mpeg
file
the problem is that although the original movie plays fine on the adobe
premiere monitor, the edited versiondoes not play properly - it looks
very 'shaky' as if every frame is being repeated twice
can anyone explain or tell me how to fix this??
i don't kow miuch about video editing
thanks
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Simon3000 wrote:
> Hi guys
> I need to edit some dvd recordings for work.
> I have movie clips as .vob files on a recordable DVD which i have
> copied to my hard drive. I then changed the file extension from .vob to
> .mpg to allow it to be imported into Adobe premiere 1.5 (windows xp).
> I edited the movie into clips which appear on the adobe premiere
> timeline and can be previewed as sequence before exporting as an mpeg
> file
> the problem is that although the original movie plays fine on the adobe
> premiere monitor, the edited versiondoes not play properly - it looks
> very 'shaky' as if every frame is being repeated twice
> can anyone explain or tell me how to fix this??
> i don't kow miuch about video editing
> thanks
By "edited version" do you mean re-encoded to MPEG2 and re-authored as
a DVD? Or do you mean simply played on the compter using Premier's
preview function? If re-encoded and re-authored, it could be that the
field-dominance has been flipped...IIRC Premiere uses "lower field" by
default, while DVDs require "upper field". Check your export settings.
Is the final destination for your edited video a computer? Or a DVD to
be played on a television monitor? If for TV, then it is nearly
impossible to judge the final quality on a computer monitor. If for
computer, then you might consider de-interlacing the original clips. If
for TV, then keep the video interlaced (or you throw away 50% of the
picture information.)