With ever-improving camera technology and storage solutions, the 4K industry has grown steadily since then. Today 4K has become a new standard in the video industry for high-budget feature films, TV dramas. If you got some 4K video from Samsung NX500 or other 4K cameras, you will be eagerly know the Samsung NX500 4K video workflow. This article focuses on Samsung NX500 4K video to Sony Vegas Pro workflow.
Monday, October 26, 2015
Tricks for Editing Samsung NX500 4K Video in Sony Vegas Pro
Tricks for Editing Panasonic HC-X1000 4K Video in Sony Vegas Pro
With ever-improving camera technology and storage solutions, the 4K industry has grown steadily since then. Today 4K has become a new standard in the video industry for high-budget feature films, TV dramas. If you got some 4K video from Panasonic HC-X1000, or other 4K cameras, you will be eagerly know the 4K video workflow. This article focuses on Panasonic HC-X1000 4K video to Sony Vegas Pro workflow.
Monday, October 19, 2015
Workaround for editing Canon XF300 MXF in Premiere Pro CC/CS6/CS5
In this article, you will learn how to edit Canon XF300 MXF footage in Premiere Pro CC/CS6/CS5 without any problem. Please read on.
If you are using a Canon XF300 camera with Premiere Pro 6.0 or its earlier versions of CS4, CS5, CS5.5, or even Premiere Elements, you may see the error "ERROR COMPILING MOVIE: UNKNOWN" coming up when exporting a movie composed of MXF clips, whether it's to AVI, H.264, etc., this error comes up, in particular when the movie is "long", i.e. a half minute to a minute. Otherwise, with short clips there is no problem. It's enough to make you want to pull your hair out. The Internet is full of discussions on this issue, but we don't know why Adobe can't fix it? The bottom line, however, is that once you transcode your Canon XF300 MXF files to H.264 using Acrok MXF Converter, there are absolutely no problems regardless of file length…
Import and edit Sony PXW-FS7 MXF in Premiere Pro CC/CS6/CS5
If you are using a Sony PXW-FS7 camera with Premiere Pro 6.0 or its earlier versions of CS4, CS5, CS5.5, or even Premiere Elements, you may see the error "ERROR COMPILING MOVIE: UNKNOWN" coming up when exporting a movie composed of MXF clips, whether it's to AVI, H.264, etc.. It's enough to make you want to pull your hair out. The Internet is full of discussions on this issue, but we don't know why Adobe can't fix it? The bottom line, however, is that once you convert your Sony PXW-FS7 MXF footage to H.264 using Acrok MXF Converter, there are absolutely no problems regardless of file length…which in our case is perhaps a four minute movie.
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