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1. Re: PREMIERE ELEMENTS 10 PRESET FOR JPEG 720P 30 FPS VIDEO
Steve Grisetti Dec 24, 2011 12:28 PM (in response to EPHRAIM GITELMAN)There is no perfect setting for that video. It's not the best stuff for editing. (The camcorder is pretty made for shooting and then uploading to YouTube.)
But your best bet is probably the DSLR/720p 30 setting.
Although remember to render (press Enter) whenever you see red lines above the clips on your timeline!
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2. Re: PREMIERE ELEMENTS 10 PRESET FOR JPEG 720P 30 FPS VIDEO
EPHRAIM GITELMAN Dec 24, 2011 12:49 PM (in response to Steve Grisetti)I only see a DSLR 720p 60fps setting
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3. Re: PREMIERE ELEMENTS 10 PRESET FOR JPEG 720P 30 FPS VIDEO
Steve Grisetti Dec 24, 2011 1:39 PM (in response to EPHRAIM GITELMAN)I double-checked the specs for that cam. It actually shoots AVCHD Lite.
So that's those are the settings you should be using. AVCHD Lite 720p30.
Ought to work great too. Sorry I had the Lumix confused with another camcorder.
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4. Re: PREMIERE ELEMENTS 10 PRESET FOR JPEG 720P 30 FPS VIDEO
EPHRAIM GITELMAN Dec 25, 2011 11:48 AM (in response to Steve Grisetti)I was using avchd lite but had problems when using Premiere Elements 8. You may recall that you sent an email at the time saying that premiere elements 8 doesn't support avchd lite so I switched to the JPEG 720p. So I have a bunch of videos with jpeg 720p. So what do I do know?
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5. Re: PREMIERE ELEMENTS 10 PRESET FOR JPEG 720P 30 FPS VIDEO
Steve Grisetti Dec 25, 2011 4:04 PM (in response to EPHRAIM GITELMAN)If they are MJPEG, you're probably best editing them in Windows MovieMaker, if you can.
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6. Re: PREMIERE ELEMENTS 10 PRESET FOR JPEG 720P 30 FPS VIDEO
EPHRAIM GITELMAN Dec 25, 2011 4:24 PM (in response to Steve Grisetti)Pre Elements Village suggested I use the HDV 720p/30fps preset.
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7. Re: PREMIERE ELEMENTS 10 PRESET FOR JPEG 720P 30 FPS VIDEO
Steve Grisetti Dec 26, 2011 7:23 AM (in response to EPHRAIM GITELMAN)As I said in my first post, there is no perfect setting for that video format in Premiere Elements. So whatever you use, remember to render often.
And I highly recommend working on a small clip and then outputting it as an experiment and judging the quality before you put too much time and energy into a project that may or may not work.


