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June 17, 2024
Answered

Première : réapparition d'éléments supprimés dans le projet sous un dossier "éléments récupérés"

  • June 17, 2024
  • 1 reply
  • 642 views

Première : réapparition d'éléments supprimés dans le projet dans un chutier intitulé "éléments récupérés"

Mac Os Ventura 13.3.1, Premiere Pro version 24.4.1 (Build 2)

 

Depuis quelques jours, à chaque ouverture de mon projet Première, un chutier apparait, nommé "Elements récupérés" et contenant des éléments que j'avais précédemment supprimés. Il est créé automatiquement par Première 

J'ai beau

- supprimer le chutier et enregistrer,

- faire Edition > Supprimer les éléments inutilisés

- vider le cache de disque

à la réouverture du projet, le chutier réapparait... 

 

J'ai déjà rencontré le problème l'an dernier  sur un autre projet (versions antérieurs de l'Os et de Première) et ça s'est arrêté au cout de plusieurs mois, sans que je comprenne pourquoi. 

 

Est-ce que quelqu'un sait pourquoi et comment arrêter ce cycle infernal ^^?

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer Ben Insler

Hi @13424669 - glad you reached out!

 

After you render and replace, Premiere Pro will provide you with an option to restore unrendered if you right click on the item in the timeline where you performed the render and replace.  This makes the render and replace process non-destructive; it gives you the ability to, essentially, undo your render and replace, make adjustments, and then redo the render and replace on your adjustments.  You can do this as many times as you need to.

 

In your case, when you render and replace, and then delete the respective nested sequence and source media from your project, you're removing the necessary items that Premiere Pro needs to restore unrendered.  But the connecton between the render and replaced clip in the timeline, and the restore unrendered assets, has already been made. So when you close your project and then reopen it later, Premiere Pro is seeing that these neseccary restore unrendered items are missing, and it is recovering them so that restore unrendered can continue to function as designed.

 

Once you render and replace, you should not delete the source items in your project that were rendered and replaced - please keep them around 🙂

 

If they're cluttering up your workspace and you don't need them anymore, it's best to just organize them into a folder in your project.

1 reply

Community Manager
June 17, 2024

Hi mathildem1543760,

 

Sorry about the poor experience. Are you working with Productions in Premiere Pro? Have you gone through this thread to see if it helps? 

Note: Moved to the Discussions tab to continue troubleshooting.

 

Thanks,

Sumeet

June 17, 2024

Hi ! thank you for this thread !

I am not working in Productions. It is a "single", "simple" project. The thing that is similar to the thread you sent it that i have used "merged clips"  (or so i think. I use Premiere in French, so the terms are different).

 

I am creating animated series for children. For each episode i am working on, I must record my voice. I do it in Premiere. When i'm done, for each episode, i have many small parts of audio on my timeline. I need to create a single audio file for each episode, so i  "merge" my little audio pieces into one sequence, that I render and replace. Then i delete the merged sequence and the small pieces of audio, as i dont need them any more. 

 

It worked perfectly until the last two episodes. The last two merged sequences that i deleted keep reappearing in a folder called "Recovered Clips', along with the small pieces of audio that they contain. 

Ben InslerCommunity ManagerCorrect answer
Community Manager
June 20, 2024

Hi @13424669 - glad you reached out!

 

After you render and replace, Premiere Pro will provide you with an option to restore unrendered if you right click on the item in the timeline where you performed the render and replace.  This makes the render and replace process non-destructive; it gives you the ability to, essentially, undo your render and replace, make adjustments, and then redo the render and replace on your adjustments.  You can do this as many times as you need to.

 

In your case, when you render and replace, and then delete the respective nested sequence and source media from your project, you're removing the necessary items that Premiere Pro needs to restore unrendered.  But the connecton between the render and replaced clip in the timeline, and the restore unrendered assets, has already been made. So when you close your project and then reopen it later, Premiere Pro is seeing that these neseccary restore unrendered items are missing, and it is recovering them so that restore unrendered can continue to function as designed.

 

Once you render and replace, you should not delete the source items in your project that were rendered and replaced - please keep them around 🙂

 

If they're cluttering up your workspace and you don't need them anymore, it's best to just organize them into a folder in your project.