| After Effects CS4 |
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Import an Adobe Premiere Pro projectWhen you import an Adobe Premiere
Pro project, After Effects imports it into the Project panel as
both a new composition containing each Adobe Premiere Pro clip as
a layer, and as a folder containing each clip as an individual footage
item. If your Adobe Premiere Pro project contains bins, After Effects
converts them to folders within the Adobe Premiere Pro project folder.
After Effects converts nested sequences to nested compositions.
You can also import Adobe Premiere 6.0 and 6.5 projects into After
Effects.
Note: After Effects on Mac OS can’t import Adobe Premiere
Pro 1.0, 1.5, or 2.0 projects. After Effects on Mac OS can import
Adobe Premiere Pro CS3 and CS4 projects and Adobe Premiere 6.0 and
6.5 projects.
After Effects preserves the order of clips in the timeline, the footage duration (including all trimmed In and Out points), and marker and transition locations. After Effects bases the arrangement of layers in the Timeline panel on the arrangement of clips in the Adobe Premiere Pro Timeline panel. After Effects adds Adobe Premiere Pro clips to the Timeline panel as layers in the order in which they appeared—from the bottom up and from left to right—in the Adobe Premiere Pro Timeline panel. After Effects preserves changes made to the speed of a clip, for example, with the Clip > Speed command, and these changes appear as a value in the Stretch column in the After Effects Timeline panel. After Effects imports effects common to Adobe Premiere Pro and After Effects, and preserves keyframes for these effects. In Adobe Premiere Pro, an After Effects icon in the Effects panel denotes common effects used by both applications. Transitions and titles (except for dissolves) included in your Adobe Premiere Pro project appear in the After Effects composition as solid layers with their original location and duration. Audio Level keyframes are preserved. |