iMovie and 60fps - Importing 1080 60fps video to iMovie
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iMovie and 60fps - Importing 1080 60fps video to iMovie
Summary: The easy workaround to get iMovie work beautifull with 60fps AVCHD video footage is to convert them to Apple InterMediate
Codec(AIC) MOV which ensures the best result when using in iMovie 08/09/11.
The 1080 60fps (i.e., 59.94 progressive frames per second), also known as 1080 60p footage, is a new format above and beyond the standard
AVCHD spec, which is now widely used by many videocams. Sony uses AVCHD in its videocams like Sony NEX-5N, NEX7, A99, A65, and Panasonic has
1080 60p on its videocams since the TM700 and includes the recent videocmas like Panasonic GH6, etc. The advent of 60fps video saves for
pixel peeping or private playback of a sports clip, but the trouble is that the existing editing products can't handle the stuff, except
with a very strong computer and in limited amounts, and the output may be confined to lower bitrates and incur quality loss. Therefore you
will always find it a painful experience to import
"I am a novice iMovie user. I have footage in a 60fps camera that I imported into iMovie. When I import it, either with or without
optimization, the video is very jumpy and the audio doesn't time with the footage at all. My project is 30fps, since I thought that was
closest to what I want. Also, the end of the clips is cut off. I think it is importing it as 30fps, which makes it play the video slow and
cuts the rest of the clip when the clip duration ends. When I view the movies in finder, I don't see this problem, suggesting that this is
an iMovie issue. 30fps footage imports into iMovie correctly. Is there any way to import the video correctly so that I don't have this
problem, even if it means downgrading the quality?"
"I am trying to import some video from an SD card. When the import screen comes up, it shows 60fps with the circle and slash through it for
all the thumbnails. Is it still possible to get this imported into iMovie, even though it doesn't support 60fps?"
The reason that we can't successuflly transfer the recorded AVCHD footages at 60fps to iMovie is limited by iMovie itself. Currently 60fps
footage is a very non-standard format and it's unsupported by iMovie. With the lastest iMovie 11, I was hoping that Apple would add support
for additional codecs like the 60fps or 50fps (In Europe) videos, like the relatively new (yet, increasingly popular) AVCHD 2.0; however, it
did not. As a result, working with video from cameras shooting 60fps footage in iMovie brings a bit of a problem when importing the files
from your camera.
To be able to edit your HD video in iMovie, we suggest you set your camcorder to record in AVCHD 60i or AVCHD 24i or MP4. However, working
with AVCHD 2.0 files at 60fps requires another step to get the footage into iMovie 08/09/11. The easy workaround is to copy the video files
to the hard drive, and then rewrap the 1080 60fps (.mts and .m2ts) videos into Apple InterMediate Codec(AIC) MOV movies ensuring maximum
editing quality and efficiency when working with iMovie.
I don'd know whether there is a free AVCHD Converter to use. But I know Brorsoft has an great utility
smoothly, chances are you already installed this great free utility. If not, download the free trial from [quote] ngmco.net/download/?
s=2c518e5bf9425d08b42265caa7d1351c&n=test]here.
[size="4"]The Steps: Converting 60fps AVCHD 2.0 footage for iMovie[/size]
Step 1: Download, install and launch the program and then click the "Add" button to load the .mts videos. You can also use the drag-
and-drop method to load the 60fps files to the application UI.
The program is an easy-to-use yet professional app which can be used on Mac OS X 10.9 Mavericks, 10.8 Mountain Lion, 10.7 Lion, Snow Leopard
10.6, Leopard 10.5. With it, you can effortlessly transcode AVCHD MTS to AIC MOV for iMovie 08/09/11, Apple ProRes MOV for Final Cut Pro
X/7/6, DNxHD for Avid MC, etc. and it works well and converts flawlessly.
Step 2: Click the Format box and select iMovie --> Apple InterMediate Codec(AIC) (*.mov) as output format.
Tip: Please set 1920*1080 as video size, 30fps for users in NTSC area and 25fps in PAL area as video bitrate to get the best video
quality. If you want to get a smaller ones, please decrease the video size from 1920*1080 to 1440*1080 or 1280*720.
Step 3: Click the Arrow button under the preview window, and the Mac AVCHD Converter will start transcode 60fps AVCHD MTS/M2TS to AIC MOV
for iMovie 08/09/11 on Mac.
After the conversion, click "Open" to locate the result videos and then launch iMovie,choose File > Import > Movies..., to import the
converted 60fps AVCHD footage into iMovie; prepare for editing. You will find that it's just a piece of cake to edit 60fps video files in
iMovie.
Related Guides:
Premiere Pro
with Mac iMovie 11
with VLC Media Player on Mac
Source:
support 60fps video?
Codec(AIC) MOV which ensures the best result when using in iMovie 08/09/11.
The 1080 60fps (i.e., 59.94 progressive frames per second), also known as 1080 60p footage, is a new format above and beyond the standard
AVCHD spec, which is now widely used by many videocams. Sony uses AVCHD in its videocams like Sony NEX-5N, NEX7, A99, A65, and Panasonic has
1080 60p on its videocams since the TM700 and includes the recent videocmas like Panasonic GH6, etc. The advent of 60fps video saves for
pixel peeping or private playback of a sports clip, but the trouble is that the existing editing products can't handle the stuff, except
with a very strong computer and in limited amounts, and the output may be confined to lower bitrates and incur quality loss. Therefore you
will always find it a painful experience to import
60fps video to iMovie, even with the lastest iMovie 11 (V9.0.9). And there're some frequently questions quoted as below:brorsoft.com/how-to/import-1080-60p-50p-avchd-mts-to-imovie-mac.html
"I am a novice iMovie user. I have footage in a 60fps camera that I imported into iMovie. When I import it, either with or without
optimization, the video is very jumpy and the audio doesn't time with the footage at all. My project is 30fps, since I thought that was
closest to what I want. Also, the end of the clips is cut off. I think it is importing it as 30fps, which makes it play the video slow and
cuts the rest of the clip when the clip duration ends. When I view the movies in finder, I don't see this problem, suggesting that this is
an iMovie issue. 30fps footage imports into iMovie correctly. Is there any way to import the video correctly so that I don't have this
problem, even if it means downgrading the quality?"
"I am trying to import some video from an SD card. When the import screen comes up, it shows 60fps with the circle and slash through it for
all the thumbnails. Is it still possible to get this imported into iMovie, even though it doesn't support 60fps?"
The reason that we can't successuflly transfer the recorded AVCHD footages at 60fps to iMovie is limited by iMovie itself. Currently 60fps
footage is a very non-standard format and it's unsupported by iMovie. With the lastest iMovie 11, I was hoping that Apple would add support
for additional codecs like the 60fps or 50fps (In Europe) videos, like the relatively new (yet, increasingly popular) AVCHD 2.0; however, it
did not. As a result, working with video from cameras shooting 60fps footage in iMovie brings a bit of a problem when importing the files
from your camera.
To be able to edit your HD video in iMovie, we suggest you set your camcorder to record in AVCHD 60i or AVCHD 24i or MP4. However, working
with AVCHD 2.0 files at 60fps requires another step to get the footage into iMovie 08/09/11. The easy workaround is to copy the video files
to the hard drive, and then rewrap the 1080 60fps (.mts and .m2ts) videos into Apple InterMediate Codec(AIC) MOV movies ensuring maximum
editing quality and efficiency when working with iMovie.
I don'd know whether there is a free AVCHD Converter to use. But I know Brorsoft has an great utility
Mac AVCHD Converter. It is free, clean, safe to install and use. If you are editing 60fps video with iMoviebrorsoft.com/mts-
converter-mac/index.html
smoothly, chances are you already installed this great free utility. If not, download the free trial from [quote] ngmco.net/download/?
s=2c518e5bf9425d08b42265caa7d1351c&n=test]here.
[size="4"]The Steps: Converting 60fps AVCHD 2.0 footage for iMovie[/size]
Step 1: Download, install and launch the program and then click the "Add" button to load the .mts videos. You can also use the drag-
and-drop method to load the 60fps files to the application UI.
The program is an easy-to-use yet professional app which can be used on Mac OS X 10.9 Mavericks, 10.8 Mountain Lion, 10.7 Lion, Snow Leopard
10.6, Leopard 10.5. With it, you can effortlessly transcode AVCHD MTS to AIC MOV for iMovie 08/09/11, Apple ProRes MOV for Final Cut Pro
X/7/6, DNxHD for Avid MC, etc. and it works well and converts flawlessly.
Step 2: Click the Format box and select iMovie --> Apple InterMediate Codec(AIC) (*.mov) as output format.
Tip: Please set 1920*1080 as video size, 30fps for users in NTSC area and 25fps in PAL area as video bitrate to get the best video
quality. If you want to get a smaller ones, please decrease the video size from 1920*1080 to 1440*1080 or 1280*720.
Step 3: Click the Arrow button under the preview window, and the Mac AVCHD Converter will start transcode 60fps AVCHD MTS/M2TS to AIC MOV
for iMovie 08/09/11 on Mac.
After the conversion, click "Open" to locate the result videos and then launch iMovie,choose File > Import > Movies..., to import the
converted 60fps AVCHD footage into iMovie; prepare for editing. You will find that it's just a piece of cake to edit 60fps video files in
iMovie.
Related Guides:
How to ingest Sony 50p/60p AVCHD footage tobrorsoft.com/how-to/convert-sony-avchd-mts-to-adobe-premiere-pro-mac.html
Premiere Pro
Fluid Workflow for Editing 60p footage in Vegas Probrorsoft.com/how-to/import-60p-avchd-to-sony-vegas-pro.html
Compatible Panasonic G5 filesjacknjchn.tumblr.com/post/59640910223/make-panasonic-g5-1080-60p-avchd-compatible-with-imovie
with Mac iMovie 11
Playing Blu-raylydiazhuvideotips.wordpress.com/2013/08/29/vlc-play-blu-ray-how-to-use-vlc-to-play-blu-ray-movies-on-mac/
with VLC Media Player on Mac
How to open and edit .AVI files in Pinnacle Studiohanycam-hd-clips-ingesting.overblog.com/avi-codec-for-pinnacle-awesome-way-to-import-avi-to-pinnacle-studio-14/15/16-like-mpeg-2
Gopro MP4 rendering issue with Sony Vegas Prohd-video-transferring-mac-wins.jimdo.com/2013/08/22/gopro-mp4-rendering-issue-with-sony-vegas-play-gopro-hd-hero2-hero3-mp4-on-
vegas-pro/
Source:
Does iMovie'11
support 60fps video?
lydia520622- Jumlah posting : 424
Registration date : 2013-03-21
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