Showing posts with label MTS to Final Cut Pro X. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MTS to Final Cut Pro X. Show all posts

Monday, March 25, 2013

Edit video with the top 3 video editor


There are so many video editor on the internet, what video editing software you use most?
1. iMovie
iMovie
iMovie is a software that allows users to create a digital movie. Footage is incorporated from a video camera, DVDs or VHS, recorded sound, and still images. iMovie can export projects into formats that can be played on a DVD player or computer, integrated into a PowerPoint presentation, uploaded to YouTube or iTunes U, embedded on a web page, and referenced in Blackboard.
iMovie compatible video files: Tapeless Camcorder (MPEG-2, MPEG-4 and AVCHD);
Tape based DV-Standard and HDV (High Definition Video); Part Camera/Mobile Phone video/other video recorder devices (MPEG-1, MEPG-2, MPEG-4, H.264, 3GP, MP4); Part of QuickTime compatible MOV videos; MPEG-4 video.
To edit video with iMovie, a video converter also can help you, for example, you can use a swf video converter to convert swf to imovie mac for editing with imovie.
2. Final Cut Pro X

Final Cut Pro X is a video production suite for OS X from Apple Inc. Final Cut Pro X is a big update for the venerable editing suite, in no small part because it is now (finally) built with 64-bit support. That means that the app will be able to take advantage of the additional memory space in Mac OS X Snow Leopard and the upcoming Mac OS X Lion. The big new feature is called the Magnetic Timeline, which takes a trackless approach to editing. Final Cut Pro supports any video format that uses an installed QuickTime codec. QuickTime natively supports codecs used by a number of video devices, such as DV, DVCPRO 50, DVCPRO HD, HDV, and IMX devices.
To edit mts file with this software you should convert mts to final cut pro x supported video format, then you can import mts final cut pro x.
3. Adobe Premiere Pro
Adobe Premiere Pro
Adobe Premiere Pro is a timeline-based video editing software application. It is part of the Adobe Creative Suite, a suite of graphic design, video editing and web development programs. Some of the notable advantages of Premiere Pro over Premiere Elements are multiple sequence support, high bit-depth rendering, multicamera editing, time remapping, scopes, color correction tools, advanced audio mixer interface, and bezier keyframing.
Adobe Premiere Pro supported video format: 3GPP Movie (.3gp), Advanced Video Codec (.mts), AVCHD (.m2ts, .mts), DV stream (.dv), Flash Video (.flv, .f4v), Microsoft AVI (.avi), Microsoft NetShow (.asf), MPEG-1 (.mpg), MPEG-2 (.m2v, .mpg), MPEG-4 (.m4v), Panasonic P2 (.mxf), QuickTime Movie (.mov), Shockwave Flash object (.swf), Windows Media (.wma, .wmv), XDCam-EX movie (.mp4), XDCam-HD movie (.mxf)
To edit canon mxf video with Premiere, you can use a video converter to convert mxf to adobe premiere pro friendly format.
Doremisoft video converter also will help you convert mkv to lumia 920, it is a powerful software, to convert video to iso you should get a DVD maker to help you do this.
Enjoy your video editing journey.

Monday, November 28, 2011

Do final cut pro x supports mts file?

More than 1700 enthusiastic Final Cut users got some welcome news from Apple Tuesday night, when the company previewed Final Cut Pro X at the NAB 2011 Final Cut Pro Users Group SuperMeet.
With the new released Final Cut Pro X, many movies editing lovers are focusing on whether it can import AVCHD .MTS files to latest Final Cut Pro X directly and successfully, now let's go to the point.
FCPX claims 'Native AVCHD Support'. What does this mean?
In the older version before FCPX it uses the way to convert AVCHD to ProRes for editing on FCP.
This time, Final Cut Pro X will still not import a stand-alone AVCHD video file. But importing AVCHD still requires access to the original AVCHD camcorder, or a valid Camera Archive disk structure.
Final Cut Pro X contains improved, but not complete AVCHD support
Keep in mind that we can't import .mts files directly from the Finder. If you navigate to them from the Import dialog, it will have them grayed out. FCPX doesn't work with them directly, you must import MTS files directly from the camera, from a memory card (with the original file structure in place), or from a camera archive. But having to use camera archives is stupid.
The real way to import AVCHD .MTS to Final Cut Pro X
We just need a way with no require with ingest supported with additional software and no use camera archives method. So the AVCHD to FCPX Converter is recommended for you. It's designed directly to convert AVCHD.MTS (1080p60/50 included)to FCPX supported formats MP4, MOV, DV. So no matter the AVCHD files are single .MTS files or directly from your camera, you can transfer it to FCPX compatible formats and directly import it to FCPX.
Doremisoft AVCHD to FCPX Converter is the best Advanced Video Coding high definition video camera software that makes your HD video totally awesome. AVCHD Video Converter Mac enables you to convert M2TS, MTS, etc videos to most popular formats, such as MOV, MP4, AVI, 3GP, FLV, MPEG-4, MP3, etc. Then you can import HD movies on hugely significant pieces of Mac applications, like iMovie, FCP, FCE, iDVD and more.
In adddition, it can edit AVCHD video in your favourite Mac video editor software, like shink file size, remove unnoticable details, join file pieces, modify video effect, capture still picture from movies, rotate video and more features that you need.
With this software, so you can convert mts files to final cut pro x for editing.