Even though I agree, and yes, there are many refinements that I’d also like to see Cyberlink incorporate into PD, I actually just tried CLD’s suggestion, as well as Adrian’s “other option” above, and both work quite well. And this once again brings up the concept of pre-production as a valuable method to expand ones options when editing with PD7.
Many here have often endorsed the concept of pre-assembling effects laden sequences and then producing to Avi, or Mpeg, or whatever, and then inserting these pre-produced elements back into one’s production.
Yes, it would be nice if one could just throw everything into the timelines, and have every possible effect or whatever we could possibly conceive of, be accomplished in PD7 with little more than a single mouse click.
I mean a very good friend of mine can do just about exactly that with his Final Cut Pro editor. Then again, he is often amazed that I can duplicate most anything he can do, though it does require a little extra work and some pre-production.
But even though I do have to split tracks here and there. And even though I do have to plan ahead now and then. And even though I do have to sometimes close my main project to open a new project to create the first part of a desired element for a sequence (like that flipping effect that simulates the effect that was in the Superman movie, that I demonstrated and uploaded to SMWOV for you 7Phil7)
http://forum.cyberlink.com/forum/posts/list/6861.page
I usually find that the results are worth the effort.
Yes, I do have to do all those things because my PD7 doesn’t have all the refinements that my friend Jared’s software does (though upon viewing some of my PD7 productions, he often asks…
How did you do that? )
Still, as a PD7 owner, I do have one thing that Jared and his $1300.00 program doesn’t have. And that’s that extra $1200.00 in my pocket.
This message was edited 5 times. Last update was at Jun 28. 2009 08:46
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