There are so many cameras out there, and they all work to one degree or
another, that no one can say which camera you should get. This is something
you'll have to decide. I know nothing of the Lumix FZ100, so I did a google
which came up with this review
<http://www.photographyblog.com/reviews/panasonic_lumix_dmc_fz100_review/>
and this one
<http://reviews.cnet.com/digital-cameras/panasonic-lumix-dmc-fz100/4505-6501
_7-34150249.html> right on top. Maybe they'll help you decide.
As far as comparing the Canon to the Panasonic inside of Premiere Pro - it
is unlikely that PPro will behave much different between them. The
performance of PPro is driven mostly by the codec's, the amount and type of
effects, and other matters that are independent of the camera itself.
Keep in mind that the frame size of HD is different than the frame size of
DV, so there will be size and resolution issues if you attempt them both on
the same timeline. Nevertheless, they can be mixed.
Lee
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Leonel Dolara
Sent: Wednesday, June 01, 2011 9:24 AM
To: Adobe Premiere
Subject: [AP] My intro to HD - help me decide!
Dear all,
I am still editing video from my Canon Elura 100 that uses MiniDV and
everything goes right.
But I am very willing to start editing and shooting in HD, but before I buy
anything, I would like to follow your advices.
My idea is to buy the Panasonic Lumix FZ100, both for taking pictures and
for shooting in Full HD. Is it the right choice? (I have read reviews and
know the usual issues of the Panasonic's on low light noise, but I have the
FZ8 and I'm already used to it and never was a real problem).
The format in this case is AVCHD, that Premiere supports.
The thing is that it's very possible that I will need to render my projects
in standard DVDs yet.
So... my main doubts are:
The resulting DVD image quality will be very good as it comes from Full HD?
Or I will still get the same results than shooting with my Canon Elura?
When editing in Premiere AVCHD, and then rendering to standard DVDs, will
the render be slower than before?
For you to know: I have the intel i7, quad-core (8 threads) and 8GB RAM.
Windows 7 64 bits, Adobe Premiere CS5. Nvidia Quadro FX380.
If you think that I should go another path, notice that what I will like to
have is the possibility of shooting in HD, still be able to render to
standard DVDs, and I will really like not to have to wait the real time
capture that a MiniDV takes.
As always, I will be expecting your answers anxiously.
Thanks to all in advance.
--
Leonel Dolara
Actor y Director
leoneldolara.webs.com
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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