When I say  "it seems difficult to edit them at the timeline"  I mean that when 
the mpg2 file is played in the timelime is not so "soft" as a Avi file (It 
works like editing  a very large file, very dificult to make fine movements 
with the pointer... understand? )

I work with ordinary DVDs 4.7 mb

thanks
Claudio


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Lee Menningen 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Monday, July 07, 2008 11:11 AM
  Subject: RE: [AP] best performance with mpg in Premiere


  I'm a bit puzzled by the idea that "Premiere is not too friendly with
  mpegs". My HD cameras make 1920x1080 TOD files which are imported into the
  computer and converted by manufacturer-provided software into mpeg2. Then I
  do all my work in a Premiere project set to 1920x1080. The only other file
  type I use are Digital Juice mov files - my timelines are a mix of only mov
  and mpg2 files.

  When done editing and ready to make a DVD I go to Export > Adobe Media
  Encoder, and set the Format drop-down to MPEG2 Blu-Ray and the Preset
  drop-down to HDTV 1080i 29.97 High Quality. This makes a set of files for
  each timeline sequence. Then I import those files into Encore to make the
  menus and backgrounds and use Encore to write to DVD (not Blu-Ray at this
  point, I don't have a blu-ray drive) in the DVD widescreen format. I don't
  know the actual resolution written to DVD but the quality is much better
  than standard DVD and there are no frozen frames or those kind of problems.

  Also, you say "it seems difficult to edit them at the timeline" - in what
  way are they "difficult"?

  Lee

  From: [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  On Behalf Of Claudio Franzetti
  Sent: Monday, July 07, 2008 8:26 AM
  To: [email protected]
  Subject: [AP] best performance with mpg in Premiere

  hello group
  I am capturing some VHS tapes, and I did it MPG2 format (8000 kb/s, high
  quality)
  The captured image is good, but the problem appears when I try to edit them
  with Premiere: It seems dificult to edit them at the timelime, and the final
  mpg file to burn in a DVD has poor quality, frozen frames and other quality
  problems

  I know that Premiere is not too friendly with mpgs, but...Does anyone knows
  the best way to edit mpg with Premiere Pro without loosing picture quality? 

  thanks

  Claudio

  _._,___ 

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