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Participant
June 4, 2020
Answered

How to link proxies in Premiere Pro of clips that have been replaced by AE clips

  • June 4, 2020
  • 3 replies
  • 1307 views

Hi, I am having a huge lagging issue with Premiere Pro working with 4K. It has all worked fine with proxies until I had to use After Effects to reduce the noise of some of the clips. I have replaced the clips in Premiere pro with the AE clips. Even though the AE clips are themselves linked to proxies in AE. When I go back to my Premiere Pro project they appear in 4K, which prevents me from reading any of them as my computer is not powerful enough. This is a huge problem for me as I need to finalise a 1h30 project in the next two days and I have been stuck with this issue for the last month. What can I do for my AEclips in Premiere pro to be read as/linked to proxies? Thanks.

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Correct answer R Neil Haugen

Most of the time, and especially with hardware limited computers, it's best to replace your Ae comps on a Premiere timeline with exported media from Ae as fast as you have the work in Ae done. Running both apps through their "Dynamic Link" process can have issues and will especially be problematic with stressed hardware.

 

I would recommend exporting from Ae in say the final format/codec you'll be using as your master export of the project from Premiere is your going to be using an intraframe codec like ProRes, DNxHD/R, or Cineform. If you're going to be exporting the project final in H.264, I'd still use an intraframe export from Ae so that it plays back easier in Premiere. And encodes easier for the export.

 

Neil

3 replies

R Neil Haugen
R Neil HaugenCorrect answer
Legend
June 4, 2020

Most of the time, and especially with hardware limited computers, it's best to replace your Ae comps on a Premiere timeline with exported media from Ae as fast as you have the work in Ae done. Running both apps through their "Dynamic Link" process can have issues and will especially be problematic with stressed hardware.

 

I would recommend exporting from Ae in say the final format/codec you'll be using as your master export of the project from Premiere is your going to be using an intraframe codec like ProRes, DNxHD/R, or Cineform. If you're going to be exporting the project final in H.264, I'd still use an intraframe export from Ae so that it plays back easier in Premiere. And encodes easier for the export.

 

Neil

Everyone's mileage always varies ...
Participant
June 12, 2020

Thanks a lot Neil. I think I screwed up a little with the dynamic links too and my computer, as you have well guessed is not the strongest. Thanks a lot for your advise, I will give it a try. It will at least help me read the clips I need to work on and hopefully help a little with the final export.

Legend
June 4, 2020

Perhaps "Render and Replace" the Dynamic Link AE comp? Then if you ever update the AE comp and need to replace the proxy, restore the original and then render & replace again.

Participant
June 12, 2020

That's unfortunately not working... lagging too much. but thanks.

MyerPj
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 4, 2020

I would say to export out from AE and bring in those clips to PP. Using something like ProRes or Cineform for the export. If it's an HD project, then export out of AE at that resolution.

 

Participant
June 12, 2020

Thank you MyerPj, I will have to try that. Unfortunately this means that I will not be able to work all I could want on those clips into PP once back into the sequence (ie extend the clip for instance) but at least it will help me read them and it will probably help with the export too. Fingers crossed. Next time I will know better and not use AE until my project is 100% ready for the last colouring touches!

Participant
June 12, 2020

But thanks a lot 🙂