May 12th, 2010
3:10
Editing DSLR Video in the NEW Adobe Premiere Pro CS5
In this brief video, Adobe's Worldwide Video/Audio Evangelist Jason Levine will show you the incredible power and ease of NATIVELY editing DSLR footage in Premiere Pro CS5.
That's right. Straight from the camera to the timeline. No transcoding; no proxies. Import your videos through Adobe Bridge/Photo Downloader, or pull content directly off your CF/XD/SD/Express/PCMCIA card from a card reader. Full frame-size, mixed frame rates, all living together, harmoniously, in the Premiere Pro CS5 timeline. And what makes it all possible? The incredible new 64-bit Mercury Playback Engine. Oh, and Premiere Pro CS5 is a native 64-bit app as well now.
Gear Guide
Camera used: Canon 7D
Lens: Canon EFS 18-135mm, 3.5; Tamron AF28-200mm, 3.8
Machine(s): MacBookPro COREi7; 8GB RAM, Snow Leopard; HP8730w Quad-Core, 8GB RAM, Windows7
Download a FREE Fully Functional 30 Day Trial of Premiere Pro CS5 here.
I will cover the technology, gadgets, events and cool toys that have affected me in some way. I will also give recommendations on the products that I have actually used.














Nice tutorial, but why is he whispering?
Pingback: Editing DSLR Video in the NEW Adobe Premiere Pro CS5 | Terry … | Penny Stocks
Pingback: Native DSLR Editing With Different Frame Rates in Premiere Pro CS5 — Tech Tilt
Hi Terry, nothing to do with your review but the lady in the photo at the top right, I was just wondering who she is? She has a very interesting face
Pingback: Editing DSLR Video in the NEW Adobe Premiere Pro CS5 | News of the technical world
I’d like to see some DSLR-oriented tutorials that are even more basic than this. Some of us don’t know anything about making or editing video, but we want to get started.
I was under the impression that the Mercury Rendering Engine required certain NVIDIA video cards in order to work with HDSLR footage in real time without transcoding.
Explanation?
-Hopper
The Mercury engine also has a software only component. Granted with an Nvidia card you can get MORE layers of HD, but if your computer is fast enough you’ll still benefit from Mercury in software even without the Nvidia card.
Pingback: DSLR Videos editieren mit Premiere Pro CS5 | Harry J. Bauer