![]() This review began back in September where I tried editing video footage from the Sony VG900 camcorder. My familiarity was with both Elements and Pro.īelieve me, Elements has come a long way and is very much changed. Back in college, I was a video editor and cinematographer and having used Premiere, Sony Vegas, and Final Cut, I was very happy with the offerings back then but leaned more towards Premiere. Perhaps it is because I haven’t used the program intensely for a very long time, but Premiere now seems strange. – New sharing features for a faster workflow Ease of Use After shooting footage with the VG900, 24-70mm f2.8, A99, and 50mm f1.4, we then imported the footage for editing. Later on, we upgraded to a Macbook Pro 13 Inch Retina. Gear Usedįor this test we used Adobe Premiere Elements 11 on a regular Macbook. – Cutting clips and snapping them seems tougher to do now. ![]() ![]() – Porting settings from a normal Macbook over to Retina was quite clumsy and caused lots of errors – Doesn’t play so well with a MacBook Retina Display – Multi-layering of videos is an excellent way to edit for beginners as long as they can keep their tracks synced Cons – Affordable solution for anyone looking to edit videos ![]() Here’s a quick summation of our findings over the past couple of months. Unfortunately, it can’t handle all of the more powerful codecs that today’s cameras can output. Premiere Elements has changed drastically from earlier versions, and I still believe that 8 may have been the best one. The program in general, however, is really quite straight forward and we believe that it will make editing easier for all those that only need to do the very basics with a little bit of extra power. We’ve been testing Adobe Premiere Elements 11 for a couple of months now and it’s been an interesting and sometimes frustrating experience. ![]()
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