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video wird nicht so hochgeladen bei YouTube wie in der Vorschau bei Premiere pro

New Here ,
Aug 21, 2025 Aug 21, 2025

Ich habe ein Video gedreht über die Natur dabei regnet es. Wenn ich es bei Premiere Pro bearbeite dann sietht alles gut aus sobald ich es bei Youtube hochlade flacht der Regen ab trotz Einstelleungen. Ich habe die Ausgabe Einstellungen folgender Maßen eingestellt :H264/3840*2160 (1,0) /Progessiv/Rev 709/203 (75% HLG,58% PQ) Hardware Beschleunigung/00:41:47/ VBR/1 Durchgang/ Ziel 151.80 MBIT´s. Oder habe ich was falsch eingestellt. 

 

Ich währe euchs ehr dankbar für die Hilfe. 

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Adobe Employee ,
Aug 22, 2025 Aug 22, 2025

Hi @kur_8243

 

I am moving your query to the correct community; experts there can help you better. 

 

Thanks,
^BS

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Community Expert ,
Aug 22, 2025 Aug 22, 2025

YouTube re-encodes.

Try exporting with Prores and see how that goes.

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Adobe Employee ,
Aug 22, 2025 Aug 22, 2025

Hi kur_8243,

Welcome to the community! As Ann Bens suggested, YouTube compression can sometimes cause such issues. You may try exporting at a higher bitrate or in a less compressed codec, such as Apple ProRes 422, and see if that results in better quality on YouTube.

 

Thanks,

Sumeet

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New Here ,
Aug 24, 2025 Aug 24, 2025

Thanks for your answers. Unfortunately, the settings didn't work. It didn't matter whether I increased the bitrate or set it to Apple ProRes 422. I find this very frustrating. I'll send you a picture of my export settings.Another question. I wanted to extend my 7-day free subscription again. But unfortunately, an error occurred. The message reads: "Unfortunately, your subscription could not be changed. Try again." I've cleared my cookies and cache in Safari, but it still doesn't work. Unfortunately, I have to cancel my subscription now, otherwise I'll be charged. I find this annoyingBildschirmfoto 2025-08-24 um 21.43.36.png

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Community Expert ,
Aug 24, 2025 Aug 24, 2025

The grass is that natural depth of field or is an extreme blur added.

The grass is very difficult to get properly encoded.

 

7-days trial is one time only.

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New Here ,
Aug 25, 2025 Aug 25, 2025

It's not about the grass, it's about the rain, which isn't shown on YouTube the way it is in the Premiere Pro video. The first time I did a 7-day free trial, I was able to extend it. But this time it doesn't work.

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Adobe Employee ,
Aug 25, 2025 Aug 25, 2025

Thanks for the screenshot. I can't see raindrops in the preview of the Export window. Is it visible at your end for the frame in the Export window? Also, are the raindrops visible when you import the exported video back into Premiere Pro?

 

-Sumeet

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New Here ,
Aug 25, 2025 Aug 25, 2025

So, when I upload the video from my camera to my computer, the video is exactly as I imagined it. However, when I upload the video to YouTube via Premiere, it doesn't display exactly as I see it in Premiere Pro. That is, the rain, or rather the raindrops, are much less visible than in Premiere Pro, and I don't know what settings I need to adjust to make it look exactly the same on YouTube as it does in Premiere Pro.

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LEGEND ,
Aug 25, 2025 Aug 25, 2025

Raindrops are tiny moving bits. Getting them to show at all in video work is difficult, as you normally must have light shining through the raindrops.

 

Getting raindrops to survive the re-compression that is used for YouTube and streaming services is near impossible. Because of the way data compression works. And yea, that's frustrating.

 

It's back to you must have light shining through the raindrops to be seen.

 

I know of people that also go to great lengths to mimic specific film grain patterns. Incredible amount of detail they work to get to recreate film grain.

 

But as noted colorist Walter Volpatto has shown ... for really any professional deliverable, it really doesn't make much difference how you make your film grain.

 

He did several detailed (and some expensive) film grain emulations, put them back to back to back, and created the deliverable files that he would normally make for DCI film projectors, optical disk, and broadcast/streaming requirements.

 

Then setup a room with the projectors, disc players set to big screen TVs, and such ... and played the files for a couple groups of high-end directors, DPs, and editors ... none of which could identify differences.

 

Because the compression encoding simply smooths over small fine bits too much.

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New Here ,
Aug 25, 2025 Aug 25, 2025

It's not about the rain tropics. Sorry, I made a mistake. I'll explain it again. It's raining in the video. And when I upload it with the settings your colleagues suggested, it stays the same. I want the rain to be shown in terms of intensity like in Premiere Pro. When I watch the video in the preview, it's perfect, but I want it to be shown the same way on YouTube. It has to be possible to show the intensity of the rain just like in Premiere Pro. It's not about the details of the drops, but about the intensity of the rain. There's no point in uploading a video if it doesn't look the same as the original.

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LEGEND ,
Aug 25, 2025 Aug 25, 2025

I think you misunderstand the realities of the process.

 

In compression, in ever step, fine details are discarded. Period. Especially if using any compressed format, such as mp4/H.264/5 especially. There, compresson is done in small blocks of pixels, making them the same if their close.

 

The viewer won't notice this on most things, but on such things as raindrops and really finely crafted "film" grain, those details will suffer. You might not notice them on playback on your system of the exported file, but YouTube will run another encoding with further compression of the file you send to them.

 

That is simple, factual reality.

 

You might be able to export a high-res ProRes such as a 4444 out of Premiere, and after Youtube friks it up in their re-encoding, see the raindrops.

 

Might.

 

That's just reality. It's how data bits work. And yes, it can be frustating.

 

Which is why Volpatto, one of the world's top movie colorists, gave up on 'fancy' film grain for any movie he works on. He cannot get it actually into the image as displayed whether DCI theatriccal projection, broadcast or streaming, or 'home video' release.

 

If Walter can't, you and I aint got a prayer. Sorry!

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New Here ,
Sep 02, 2025 Sep 02, 2025

You might be able to export a high-resolution ProRes image, say 4444, from Premiere and see the raindrops after YouTube messed up the re-encoding. Am I correct in saying I'm supposed to edit the video with these settings before uploading it to YouTube? My English isn't that good.

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LEGEND ,
Sep 02, 2025 Sep 02, 2025

That is a suggestion to edit as you have, but do an Export with ProRes 4444 as the codec of the export, and upload that ProRes 4444 to YouTube.

 

After YouTube mangles your pixels in their re-encode, you ... might ... be able to see the raindrops.

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New Here ,
Sep 03, 2025 Sep 03, 2025
LATEST

thank you 

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