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heathern777
Participant
June 7, 2018
Answered

Importing from SVP into AE

  • June 7, 2018
  • 1 reply
  • 6111 views

Hi! I'm somewhat new to AE and have been a long time user of Sony Vegas Pro. However, after doing a test edit on AE, I've found out that I prefer to cut my clips and audio in SVP, as its easier to time stuff correctly, and do transitions/effects in AE. I currently have an edit I'd like to make cut out, but it seems no matter what method I try (rendering each individual clip, importing .aaf files, basically every tutorial video I tried to watch), it didn't seem to work out for me.

So, my main question would be: how would you suggest importing a SVP file into AE? I have Vegas Pro 13 and AE 2017 as of right now, and am using a Windows 10. Any help would be much appreciated, as I've struggled with trying to figure this out for about 3 hours. Thanks!

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer Mylenium

Going the .pproj route presumably would require to open it in Premiere first and save it again from there. Same with AAF. they are probably including a lot of proprietary metadata that AE can't handle and only "conforming" it in Premiere itself would get rid of that. The clips flashing is a typical sign of open frame groups in MPEG-based footage. You could possibly improve upon it by enforcing a fixed keyframe interval in the export settings and possibly playing with other options like actual frame spacing, MPEG levels and compatibility settings.

Mylenium

1 reply

Mylenium
Legend
June 7, 2018

Your description is too vague to make sense of it. Most importantly you haven't explained what "didn't work out" is supposed to mean. Were there errors/ warnings? What specificialyl have you done? what didn't work as you expected it to? You need to be a lot more precise.

Mylenium

heathern777
Participant
June 7, 2018

Sorry about that! I wasn't too sure what I needed to include to be honest. So far, I have tried:

1. Rendering each clip individually into AE. This one was closest to working, but at the end of each clip there was a weird red flash which didn't appear before I imported it into AE from SVP. I looked up some tutorials on how to get rid of it, but it seemed like there were only a few which had to do with adding lines of code into AE, and I wasn't too sure that I wanted to mess with it in case I broke AE totally.

2. Exporting the file from SVP as an .aaf. This problem was on SVP's part, as I got an 'archive failed' error that looked like this. I found basically nothing online about that (but I probably just missed what I was supposed to find so now I'm gonna look dumb haha) about it so I moved on an tried out some stuff myself.

3. Exporting the file from SVP as a .pproj. This one I just kinda decided to try out myself because it seemed like something that might have worked, but everytime I imported it to AE, it would just crash AE totally. I'm guessing that because its a file that's not even meant for something like that, I just assumed it would be worth a try and be better than nothing.

Those are all the solutions I've seen as of now, and the problems I'm having with them are probably really simple things I'm overlooking to be honest!! I'm not that most tech savvy person I guess, but I decided it might as well be worth a shot trying to ask.

Mylenium
MyleniumCorrect answer
Legend
June 7, 2018

Going the .pproj route presumably would require to open it in Premiere first and save it again from there. Same with AAF. they are probably including a lot of proprietary metadata that AE can't handle and only "conforming" it in Premiere itself would get rid of that. The clips flashing is a typical sign of open frame groups in MPEG-based footage. You could possibly improve upon it by enforcing a fixed keyframe interval in the export settings and possibly playing with other options like actual frame spacing, MPEG levels and compatibility settings.

Mylenium