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1. Re: ProRes 4:2:2 in CS5
Colin Brougham May 6, 2011 10:46 AM (in response to ectobuilder50)Could I place ProRes 4:2:2 on my timeline and edit, preview...etc.?
If you have QuickTime Player (don't need Pro) installed, yes.
How have people worked with ProRes 4:2:2 in CS5?
Very well, thank you. Just import and edit.
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2. Re: ProRes 4:2:2 in CS5
ectobuilder50 May 6, 2011 10:50 AM (in response to Colin Brougham)Thanks for your reply.
So do you mean that CS6 cannot preview ProRes 4:2:2 but can edit?
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3. Re: ProRes 4:2:2 in CS5
Colin Brougham May 6, 2011 10:52 AM (in response to ectobuilder50)So do you mean that CS6 cannot preview ProRes 4:2:2 but can edit?
(Assuming you mean CS5/CS5.5) No; anything you can import into Premiere, you can edit. ProRes can be imported with no additional workarounds (assuming QuickTime Player is installed, as mentioned previously) and summarily edited. It works 100%.
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4. Re: ProRes 4:2:2 in CS5
CAOLSEN Aug 3, 2011 11:55 AM (in response to Colin Brougham)Question?
What inport preset would I use then for inporting ProRes422 into CS5.5 ?
I don't see anything listed that covers that format.
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5. Re: ProRes 4:2:2 in CS5
Colin Brougham Aug 3, 2011 1:10 PM (in response to CAOLSEN)Whatever preset you want.
I'm really not kidding.
You want to match the parameters of your source footage as closely as possible to a sequence preset, but there's really no rule that says you have to. If you don't know what your footage is--e.g. frame size, frame rate, field order--just drag a clip to the New Item button at the bottom of the Project panel. You'll wind up with a sequence that matches your footage parameters.
Sequence presets in Premiere Pro are really a matter of convenience; just because you have an AVCHD preset or an XDCAM-EX preset or a RED4K preset, doesn't mean you're limited to those types of source material.
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6. Re: Re: ProRes 4:2:2 in CS5
CAOLSEN Aug 3, 2011 1:36 PM (in response to Colin Brougham)Thank you very much!

