hey everyone!
I edited two home movies that were one hour each into a 20 minute video in Adobe Premiere Pro. The original files were 2.4 gigs each. When all is said and done, and I export the movie, it's 4.8 gigs... for a 20 minute video. I used the microsoft AVI dv codec at first. when this made the file huge, I tried another and it was almost the same size, and the quality sucks. How do I make my file smaller? I want to put it on a dvd (possibly with other videos, if I can reduce the size). Any help would be awesome.
Also, there is a small blue bar on the bottom of the video. Can I crop this out? Can I make the video smoother and less "jumpy"?
Thanks again!
-Justin
+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 3 of 3
-
-
Just an educated guess:
DV files (AVI, MOV or other) are 13GB/Hour. This is the same as 4.8GB/20min. That's what you made the 1st time.
Why?
Because, that's what Premiere defaults to (as well it should). This is the same rate you should expect.
You probably started with a (low bitrate?) DivX or Xvid, etc. If you export the edited timeline to one of those again, you'll be re-encoding to a low bitrate. This is a bad thing to do as it is almost guaranteed to give you crappy video--ESPECIALLY when using Premiere Pro which often doesn't allow you access to many of the features that might allow you to save some of the quality.
You can't have it both ways.
You must either:
1. Live with High quality and high filesizes as your master.
or
2. Live with Low quality and low filesizes
You'd have a better time with it if you:
1. Had better quality source material to begin with
AND
2. Used better tools with which to ENCODE your final distribution files (read small, but not your master files which SHOULD still be larger).
Scott -
the original files were over 1 hour and 2.4 gigs each. i believe they are just straight from d.v. camera, but I'm not sure. total of over 2 hours and almost 5 gigs. the final product was 20 minutes and 4.8 gigs.
I could probably live with low quality, but when I used a different codec and reduced the quality by about 60%, the file was almost the same size, and was so crappy i couldn't even watch it. It's a fishing video, so most of it is on a boat... hence the movement.
Which export method would work best? I at least want it around 4 gigs so it can go on a dvd. But smaller would work best. I can put it through gspot, maybe someone can tell me how to make my specific file smaller without too much loss of quality? Which codecs are better than others? Thanks a bunch for all the help.
Similar Threads
-
Can you import from Adobe After Affects to Adobe Premiere Pro?
By Devilsadvocate in forum EditingReplies: 9Last Post: 29th Feb 2012, 21:43 -
Adobe Premiere Pro CS4 Cannot Import .mp4 File
By spike32 in forum EditingReplies: 5Last Post: 19th Jan 2010, 08:15 -
Adobe Premiere Pro CS3 & Vegas Pro help
By KS89 in forum EditingReplies: 1Last Post: 8th Sep 2009, 22:52 -
SxS Pro card file MXF to DVD using Adobe Premiere Pro CS3
By Fary4u in forum Video ConversionReplies: 8Last Post: 20th Jul 2009, 09:00 -
Adobe Premiere Pro 2.0 project file/autosave question
By wwervd316 in forum Newbie / General discussionsReplies: 0Last Post: 20th May 2008, 19:14