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Open Avid or Premiere

Start a New Project

-In AVID, make sure the project frame rate matches your footage frame rate

-In Premiere, it doesn't matter that much

Use the Browsers to find the footage

-In Avid it's called the "Source Browser"

-In Premiere it's called the "Media Browser"

Import your footage

-In Avid click the Link button

-In Premiere right click and choose Import

You're done, just edit like you would normally.

Unless you need better performance...

...If so, proceed.

  

At this point

-Avid is linked to the native file.

You can tell because under the video column it says H.264.

-Premiere is also linked to the native file.

You can tell because under the Video Codec column it also says H.264.

In Avid, before turning the clip into a more edit friendly codec, you need to create some bread crumbs so Avid can relink to the original footage when your finished with your timeline.

To do this, select the clips in the bin and choose Clip>Modify>Modify Clip...

 

 

 

In Premiere, you'll skip down a few rows on this help sheet until you see pics in the far right column again.

 
Choose Set Source from the dropdown options 
Click New 

Type an 8 character or less identifier

I recommend date shot and camera id...

EX: If you shot on this card on 9/10/16 with camera A then use

091016A

 

Click the black square next to the identifier you just typed

this will get you out of name editing mode.

 
Then click OK in the Select Tape window 
Click OK in the Modify window 
Click OK when it says this 
Click OK when it says this 

If you receive this error, you will need to create an Avid Project with the correct frame rate, like we mentioned in the second step of this help sheet.

This means if you have multiple frame rate clips...each frame rate must have it's own Avid project.

 

If you see the name you gave your "TAPE" under the Tape column, then you've succeeded.

What we're doing here is making avid think that this media came from a Tape with a specific name. This helps because tape name is the default setting that avid uses for relinking media...it makes things much easier and more reliable down the road.

 
If the tape name area is blank, it didn't work and you will probably have a REALLY HARD TIME reconnecting/relinking your footage. 
Now select you clip in the bin and choose Clip>Consolidate/Transcode 

Choose Transcode

Choose a drive

Choose a video resolution

Convert the audio (it's always a good idea to do this even if the audio has the same bit depth and sample rate because it forces avid to recreate MXF audio files in it's own format.)

 
Now you'll have a "NEW" clip or clips in your bin that are very Avid friendly. Edit with these clips. Maybe even move them into their own set of bins. The edit friendly clips are denoted with a ".new.01" or other number if you've done this more than once. 
In Premiere, you'll want to right click on your clip and choose Proxy>Create Proxies... 
   
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