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  1. Member
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Norway
    Search Comp PM
    Hi,

    I took some home videos that I am trying to export as a DVD from Adobe Premiere Pro 2.0, it's the suite version. I'm finished with the whole movie, and exported it the other day to DVD. It took like 30 hours to finish exporting, and the movie is an hour and 3 minutes long.

    When I looked at it today, it was funny. Everything that wasn't filmed was not how it was suppose to be. Like I have this intro movie that I made in Photoshop that I imported as an image into Premiere Pro. That is not the way it's suppose to be. I have some titles that are acting up, and the credits at the end does not show at all. So everything else that was filmed seemes to be fine, but anything I made from Premiere Pro or Phoroshop is acting strange.

    I have no idea why it's doing this. I barely know how to export my movie into DVD, and certainly don't understand the process. Is there something basic I'm missing or could anyone just help me with this?

    Thanks in advance!
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  2. Member
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Republic of Texas
    Search Comp PM
    It could be many things, and without sufficient technical information from you, we can only guess. Here are some issues that come to mind:

    The MPEG-2 encode settings possibly don't match original source -- The mismatch could be between PAL and NTSC; it could be a framerate mismatch; it might be a video field mismatch, etc. As it would apply to the Photoshop intro and credits: pixel aspect ratio, color profile, file type and frame rate may not be video-friendly.

    Your MPEG-2 compression settings, bitrate, etc. may be slowing down the encoding. This can certainly be expected if you are doing multi-pass variable bitrate (VBR) encodes.

    There are plenty of other possibilities, but it is impossible to pinpoint with the amount with so little information.
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  3. Member
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Norway
    Search Comp PM
    Hi,

    Sorry for the late reply. I've been busy. Thank you for the help, I appreciate it, and Im not being sarcastic! I just needed to know whether there was some kind of easy solution to it,in which case I didn't want o spend hours figuring it ot.

    So now I've played around with it and figured out what the prblem was, lucky me! So, thanks.

    BUT... Now I have another problem. The text that I used comes out looking funny. There are these moving lines like vibrating, kind of, which makes it look bad. Is that another one of those who knows what the problem is, type of problems?

    Like I said, I have no clue when it comes to video rendering and stuff...
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  4. Member edDV's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2004
    Location
    Northern California, USA
    Search Comp PM
    Originally Posted by meekochan
    Hi,

    Sorry for the late reply. I've been busy. Thank you for the help, I appreciate it, and Im not being sarcastic! I just needed to know whether there was some kind of easy solution to it,in which case I didn't want o spend hours figuring it ot.

    So now I've played around with it and figured out what the prblem was, lucky me! So, thanks.

    BUT... Now I have another problem. The text that I used comes out looking funny. There are these moving lines like vibrating, kind of, which makes it look bad. Is that another one of those who knows what the problem is, type of problems?

    Like I said, I have no clue when it comes to video rendering and stuff...
    Start over and explain what you are doing

    1. Premiere project setting.
    2. Source format. "Filming" is this 24FPS film? Or DV? Or HDV? Or AVCHD? Or........?
    3. Method of import from Photoshop. Size of still.
    4. Title source?
    5. MPeg2 encoder settings.

    Note: Premiere 2.0 is normally used to encode audio/video for DVD. Encore is used to "author" the DVD.

    The Adobe Suite does not suffer a casual user. You need to know what you are doing.

    If you are a beginner, start with the packaged training materials and the Adobe course.

    I recommend the Total Training courses after that.
    http://www.totaltraining.com/prod/adobe/

    Save by buying these courses on EBay, then sell on EBay.
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    http://www.kiva.org/about
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