My liking for Blu Ray is the high quality it supports. I bought a new LG Blu Ray burner just to work with Adobe Elements. As easy as this deck is to use, it doesn't like a lot of formats like XAVC-S. It also works well for archiving a lot of old Hi 8 tapes from the 1980's or my Mini-DV footage. Then a simple set of steps to write the Blu Ray. I shoot ACHD H.264, stick the SD card in the machine and it will easily download to the internal hard drive. My JVC Professional Blu Ray recorder is pretty simple to use. All the options of media formats (XAVCS, ACHD, etc.) are making me aware I am not up to speed on all of this. Steve, I am sure I will have more questions after I try some of the options. Also taking old Hi 8 video and warehousing on Blu Ray.
My only experience with video and Blu Ray has been warehousing my Handycam video on a JVC Professional Blu Ray writer (stand alone machine). I was out of that business for a while and am now getting back into it for sharing Blu Rays to family, but plan to progress into a small business. Exported the finished product to large hard drives for playback on the air. I then progressed to Betacam SP and and DVCAM, then editing on a Mac based non-linear system called Media 100. I started out in the early 80's shooting 3/4 Umatic Video tape with RCA TK76 three tube news cameras.
I will try your method later today.īTW, I am not new to video editing, just some of the newer stuff. I also found your book for Elements 15 on Amazon and have that on the way. I did buy your book for Premiere Elements 19, and I have on order an older version of Premiere Elements (2015) with the Blu Ray burn feature.
#Adobe premiere elements 2019 export formats trial#
I have just started learning the program so I am in the trial & error phase.