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1. Re: Is there a way to import 5K video files into CS4
John Novotny Oct 27, 2010 6:37 PM (in response to John Novotny)The video files are AVI files.
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2. Re: Is there a way to import 5K video files into CS4
John T Smith Oct 27, 2010 7:07 PM (in response to John Novotny)HD is maximum 1920x1080 and DV is 720x480 so you are FAR outside any video size I have ever seen
http://help.adobe.com/en_US/encore/cs/using/WS5C9E1CF8-B5BC-436f-89D3-61DDC02A2C47a.html
I have no idea how you will edit your files
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3. Re: Is there a way to import 5K video files into CS4
Stan Jones Oct 27, 2010 8:29 PM (in response to John T Smith)The CS4 max still size is 4096x4096
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http://help.adobe.com/en_US/PremierePro/4.0/WS92DAB4F5-E46F-46fb-B2D8-71813E6A3AE4a.html
The CS5 max is larger - 10,000x8,000:
http://help.adobe.com/en_US/premierepro/cs/using/WS92DAB4F5-E46F-46fb-B2D8-71813E6A3AE4a.h tml
I vaguely recall some other issues on whether there are lower limits in some circumstances.
I suspect that this is also a limit to video frame size in a desktop setting, but I'm not sure about that.
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4. Re: Is there a way to import 5K video files into CS4
Todd_Kopriva Oct 27, 2010 9:08 PM (in response to Stan Jones)Here are the CS5 limits, which are much greater than the CS4 limits:
http://blogs.adobe.com/premiereprotraining/2010/07/maximum_dimensions_in_premiere.html
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5. Re: Is there a way to import 5K video files into CS4
Stan Jones Oct 27, 2010 9:15 PM (in response to Todd_Kopriva)That's what I'm talking about!
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6. Re: Is there a way to import 5K video files into CS4
John Novotny Oct 27, 2010 9:59 PM (in response to Stan Jones)Thanks so much. I convert my still sequences with a open source app called Virtualdub and export them uncompressed so a 7 second clip is around 4GB but the quality is unmatched and it gives lots of room for software zooms and pans without loss of quality.
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7. Re: Is there a way to import 5K video files into CS4
able123 Oct 28, 2010 6:00 AM (in response to John Novotny)I've never done it, used it...but FCP users typicaly use an intermediate prores 422 file to edit ( less res and less overhead ( not full debayered if from that kind of raw chip ) ) ...
The edit is faster and so on, and when done those files "point" to the high res files for final rendering ( export )..
I think this is mostly done for dpx based stuff that's going to get transferred to film for projection.
That sort of "proxy" editing might be ( depending on your machine etc ) one way to deal with larger files sizes etc ??




