To Create A 24P Project; To Set 24P Playback Options; To Simulate Film Transfer - Adobe PREMIERE PRO 2 Manual

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Working with the 24P modes is useful when you intend to author a progressive scan DVD. Because Adobe Premiere
Pro recognizes 24P modes, you can perform your capture and edits within the program. Then, you can use the Adobe
Media Encoder to export the file from Adobe Premiere Pro. After you export the file, you can open it in Adobe
Encore DVD, author your DVD, and then simultaneously export the project and burn it to DVD as a 24P MPEG-2
stream. The resulting DVD is playable on any DVD player and exhibits no interlacing artifacts if you have a
480p-capable (progressive scan-capable) DVD player and television. Alternatively, you can export the Adobe
Premiere Pro 24P project in a format, such as still-image sequences, appropriate for transfer to film.
Note: Adobe Premiere Pro accepts 24P and 24PA footage only from cameras using the 24P schemes.

To create a 24P project

Open a new project.
1
2
In the New Project dialog box, choose the Load Preset tab.
From the Available Presets list, choose the DV - 24P folder.
3
4
Choose the 24P format that matches your footage.
Select a location, type a name for your project, and click OK.
5
Note: If you capture 24P footage, Adobe Premiere Pro recognizes the footage as 24P and treats it accordingly, regardless
of your project settings.

To set 24P playback options

Choose Project > Project Settings > General.
1
Click the Playback Settings button.
2
In the 24p Conversion Method pane, select one of the following options:
3
Duplicates frames where necessary to maintain 29.97 fps playback. This option uses fewer
Repeat Frame (ABBCD)
CPU resources.
Interlaced Frame (2:3:3:2)
option produces smooth playback but uses more CPU resources.
4
Click OK in the Playback Settings dialog box, and click OK in the Project Settings dialog box.

To simulate film transfer

By default, Adobe Premiere Pro converts 24P DV footage to play back at 24P. If you prefer the film transfer look,
however, you can make it play 24 fps footage at 29.97 fps.
Additionally, you can apply any of a number of third-party film-look plug-in effects to the master sequence. These
plug-ins can often perform telecine-style conversion, or add grain or color correction to simulate various film stocks.
Pay close attention to lighting and, during shooting, use tripods and do slow pans to create the appearance of using
a heavy film camera. Attention to these details will give your project more of a film look.
1
Right-click a 24P clip in the Project panel.
Select Interpret Footage.
2
Under Frame Rate, check Remove 24p DV Pulldown.
3
Click OK.
4
Combines the frames in a telecine-like scheme to maintain 29.97 fps playback. This
ADOBE PREMIERE PRO 2.0
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