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2. Re: How do you get Premiere Pro CS4 frames into Photoshop
terry lee martin Sep 2, 2009 2:39 PM (in response to Jeff Bellune)Jeff I have 4 frames that I want to get into Photoshop. I used the razor tool to isolate them from the rest of the clip. Then I used the ponter tool to select those 4 frames. I set export format as Targa, clicked export as sequence, and I ended up with a single frame to import into Photoshop. Obviously I'm missing a step here someplace. I tried it multiple times to make certain that I was following all the steps you set down.
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3. Re: How do you get Premiere Pro CS4 frames into Photoshop
Jeff Bellune Sep 2, 2009 2:45 PM (in response to terry lee martin)Try setting the Work Area Bar to cover the razored section of the
timeline. Then export as sequence again. It should work.
-Jeff
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4. Re: How do you get Premiere Pro CS4 frames into Photoshop
terry lee martin Sep 2, 2009 2:58 PM (in response to Jeff Bellune)I got it to work. I asked for 5 frames and it actually did 7. I'm OK with that, but they came as single files. I had to add them into Photoshop one at a time. Is that the way it is supposed to work, and if so, do I add them back into PPCS4 as 7 single image assets?
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5. Re: How do you get Premiere Pro CS4 frames into Photoshop
Jeff Bellune Sep 2, 2009 3:17 PM (in response to terry lee martin)I think you need Photoshop CS4 Extended to import the image sequence as
an image sequence. Use the File | Open As command. You can import them
back into Pr as an image sequence, too.
-Jeff
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6. Re: How do you get Premiere Pro CS4 frames into Photoshop
Bill Hunt Sep 2, 2009 4:15 PM (in response to Jeff Bellune)Yes, PS-Extended will make things a bit easier. While not perfect, it simplifies rotoscoping quite a bit.
Good luck,
Hunt
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7. Re: How do you get Premiere Pro CS4 frames into Photoshop
terry lee martin Sep 2, 2009 4:17 PM (in response to Bill Hunt)Thanks guys, I'll take it from there.
Terry Lee Martin
Date: Wed, 2 Sep 2009 17:15:26 -0600
From: forums@adobe.com
To: terryleemartin@hotmail.com
Subject: How do you get Premiere Pro CS4 frames into Photoshop
Yes, PS-Extended will make things a bit easier. While not perfect, it simplifies rotoscoping quite a bit.
Good luck,
Hunt
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