Focus on Panasonic camcorder | convert Panasonic camcorder movies file

How can I convert .MVI files so that they can be used in Pinnacle Studio?

I either need a free downloadable programme that will allow me to convert the full length of the videos, or I need a different Pinnacle Studio that will allow .MVI format files. Any suggestions?

As you see, some Canon digital still cameras (Powershot A75, A63, S410 etc), are capable of shooting a limited amount of video, since there is no tape, it is saved as an MVI file format. However, the MVI file format is not compatible with other programs. Even windows media player refuse to play MVI file. Besides, editing software like Windows movie maker and Pinnacle Studio do not work with the format. Because of this, the files need to be converted to a format that is more widely used, such as AVI so that these videos shot with still camera can be played and edited as easily as other common videos. This guide is to tell how to do that.

Introduction & Requirements
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Download and install Pavtube MVI Video Converter

Pavtube Video Converter is an easy-use-to use yet powerful video transcoding software. The output files created by the program can are compatible with lots of video editing programs including Windows Movie Maker, Adobe Premiere, Sony Vegas, Avid, Ulead VideoStudio Plus, Pinnacle Studio, CyberLink PowerDirector, etc. To be honest, i really like the software. Very quick conversions and lots of file format options. I find the software doing a Google search for video converters. (more…)

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Transcode MTS to ProRes for Final Cut Pro Editing flawlessly 

“Hello we captured footage with the Panasonic TM900 Hi-Def Camcorder, transfered the video files onto an external drive. We’re now trying to import those MTS files into Final Cut Pro 6.0.5 but it seems they are not supported… how do you import them?”

Recently, I have received many customer feedback problems described above. Through Google search, I also found that many people have the same problem – about “how to import MTS files to FCP Editing without quality loss?” So I want to write a solution based on this problem, look forward to helping more people. The following is the detailed steps: (more…)

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Mac AVCHD to MOV Converter – Convert Sony HDR-SR11 AVCHD footage to MOV for Avid Media Composer Editing
How to get Avid Media Composer work with AVCHD files flawlessly on the Mac?

Question: How to import AVCHD to Avid?

On Wednsday, I’m going to start filming my short film. I was originally going to use Final Cut Pro, but now that I have learned Avid, I think I have enough confidence to edit a short film with Avid. The problem is… I’ve never edited AVCHD before.

So my question is, how would I go about bringing the AVCHD files from the SD card into Avid to edit? I know these files aren’t directly editable. We will be using a Sony HDR-SR11 by the way.

Along with the DVD-recording HDR-UX1, the SR1 compresses video in AVCHD, the new high definition format that, for the first time, allows consumers to leave tape behind. However the fact is that there is few even no 3rd party support is yet available for editing. Accroding to my experience, Avid Media Composer doesn’t work with well with the SR1 AVCHD files. And the highly-compressed content are not so friendly for almost all editing softwares. How to get Avid Media Composer work perfectly with AVCHD footage? A best way is to convert the AVCHD files to QT MOV, something that Avide MC supports along with some help from the third-party tool. (more…)

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How to import Canon XF305 MXF video to Cyberlink PowerDirector for editing?

Although Canon claims that its flavor of MXF is fully supported by major NLE systems including Adobe Premiere, Apple Final Cut Pro, Avid Media Composer, and Grass Valley EDIUS, we don’t see Cyberlink PowerDirector here. So it’s understandable that PowerDirector refuses to load .mxf shootings from a XF305 camcorder. It does not matter if you’d like to edit Canon .mxf footage in PowerDirector though, as long as you have the Pavtube HD Video Converter software. The Pavtube HD Video Converter software easily converts universal MXF videos originated from Canon XF, Panasonic P2 and Sony XDCAM cams into AVI, MOV, MPG, TS, etc for editing and streaming. To import Canon MXF recordings in Cyberlink PowerDirector, you just need to convert MXF videos to PowerDirector supported video formats, like AVI, MKV, MP4, MOV, MPEG, VOB, WMV, etc.

Before conversion you need to

1. Transfer the .mxf clips to hard disk.

2. Get Pavtube HD Video Converter. The program now is on sale at the company’s site through Nov. 22, 2011 if you choose this option.

Transcode/Convert Canon XF305 MXF to MOV/AVI/MPG/MP4

Step 1. Launch the MXF to Cyberlink PowerDirector Converter. Drag and drop .mxf clips to file list. The converter works with MXF shootings taken with Canon XF series and Panasonic P2 camcorders.

Step 2. Click on “Format” and choose a preferable format. The HD Video Converter for Cyberlink PowerDirector can convert MXF to AVI, MP4, MPG, MOV, TS and more formats. H.264 .mov format is recommended as PowerDirector can load MOV files instantly.

Step 3. Click “Convert” to start transcoding the Canon MXF recordings to .mov videos. After conversion click “Open” to find .mov videos and import them to Cyberlink PowerDirector for editing.

Some more helpful features of the Canon MXF Converter for Cyberlink PowerDirector:

1. Settings- click to set video resolution(1920×1080/1440×1080/1280×720/720×480), bitrate(from 1Mbps to 20Mbps), frame rate (24p/30p). The HD Video Converter exports up to 1080p HD video.

2. Editor (next to “Add” icon)- click to set deinterlace, denoise, mute, volume up, trim, crop, etc.

Load/Import converted MXF footage to Cyberlink PowerDirector

Step 1. Start up Cyberlink PowerDirector, follow “Open Folder>>Import Media Files” to import individual video clips.

Step 2. Browse to the converted .mov video and press “Open”.

Now the MXF footage is successfully converted and imported to Cyberlink PowerDirector and you can get down to video editing.

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Convert P2 MXF files to AIC – Import Panasonic AJ HPX300 P2 MXF to Final Cut Express for editing on Mac OS X Lion
Transcode Panasonic AJ HPX300 P2 MXF files to AIC for FCE Editing on Mac OS X Lion

The Panasonic AJ HPX300 P2 Camcorder is a 1/3″ CMOS camera featuring full resolution 1920×1080 chips. The P2 card is a new solid state recording media that Panasonic developed to bridge the gap between information technology and professional video. About the same size as a PC card, the P2 card stores large amounts of video and audio data in MXF-format files. 

It is a common sense to Final Cut Express users that video shootings should be ingested to FCE from Log and Transfer window. However, this doesn’t work with the Panasonic AJ HPX300 P2 which recorded MXF files. There is solution, of course, to help you transfer MXF footage to Final Cut Express. The next few steps will show you how to do with Sony XDCAM, Panasonic P2 series and Canon MXF shootings (taken with Canon XF100, XF300, or XF305), before importing the Panasonic AJ HPX300 P2HD footage to Final Cut Express.

Before processing, you’re suggested to

1. Transfer the .mxf clips from Panasonic AG-HPX300 P2 card to Mac computer.

2. Install Pavtube MXF to FCE Converter for Mac os x Lion (Recommended, now on sale at the company’s site through Nov. 22, 2011 if you choose this option.).

Guide: Transcode/Convert Panasonic AJ HPX300 P2 MXF to Apple ProRes Intermediate Codec for FCE editing (more…)

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How to convert MTS to Apple ProRes codec for Final Cut Pro/Studio?

ProRes 422 is a standard-definition and high-definition lossy video compression format developed by Apple Inc. for use in post production. It was introduced in 2007 with Final Cut Studio 2 and is comparable to Avid’s DNxHD codec which has the same purpose and uses similar bit rates. Both are DCT based intra-frame-only codecs, and are therefore simpler to decode than distribution oriented formats like H.264.

How to convert MTS files to Apple ProRes format for Final Cut Pro(FCP) on Mac?

Recommend you Pavtube AVCHD MTS Convert for Mac. With this AVCHD camcorder MTS files Converter, you can transfer MTS files to Apple ProRes422,4444 for FCP, AIC(Apple Intermediate Codec) for Final Cut Express, QuickTime Movie format like DVCPRO HD, DV-PAL, DV/DVCPRO-NTSC, DVCPRO-PAL, DVCPRO50-PAL,DVCPRO50-NTSC, Avid DN*HD format for editing smoothly and other popular format like mov,mp4 ect.

Step 1. Install and run Pavtube MTS Convert for Mac and Log MTS files to this mts converter.

Click on “Add” to import source files, browse to the drive and click “Choose”. You do not have to open the any of the folders. In preview window you could view the video and take snapshots. When the box of Merge into one is checked, all selected videos will be combined together as one output file after conversion.

You can click “Edit” button to perform edit functions such as crop, trim, flip, effect, watermark and audio replace. To eliminate interlacing effect, simply check Deinterlacing box under Effect tab.

Step 2: Set Apple ProRes422 Codec as output format.

Click on “Format” bar when you’d like to specify an output format. Apple ProRes 422 can be found in .

Click “Settings”; if you want to further customize video and audio parameters such as video codec, audio codec, frame rate, bit rate, video size, audio channels etc. Do not forget to click on “OK” to confirm your settings. In Export box you could specify destination for the converted file.

Step 3: Start converting MTS to Apple ProRes 422 for FCP.

Click on “Convert” button to start transfer mts to prores codec.After conversion you can click the “Open” button to locate converted files and log ProRes 422 codec video files to FCP, Final Cut Studio.

PS: While Final Cut does not edit AVCHD natively, it is still a simple procedure to utilize the AVCHD footage. In Final Cut you would open your log and transfer window and import the footage as ProRes 422 which, while it creates larger files, is a great codec to edit with and I do so with most everything.I suggest you purchsed Pavtube MTS Convert for Mac, because compressor is very slow and Final Cut handle AVCHD files when it finds them in their original file structure (either by connecting the camcorder or using a memory card reader), not isolated .mts files. You don’t need the biggest and best Mac Pro and just either Final Cut Studio 2 or 3 will do just fine. I would suggest having a minimum of 4 gigs of ram which is the most FCP can utilize anyway at this point.

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Transcode HD MTS/M2TS/ MOV/ MOD/TOD/MXF into FCP for editing

HD camcorders (E.g. Sony Handycam series, Panasonic Lumix line, Canon Vixia and EOS cams) usually take MPEG-4 AVC/H.264 codec for saving video contents. The MPEG-4 AVC/H.264 codec, to some extent, is a delivery codec and not editable one. Wanna import and edit the HD MTS/M2TS/ MOV/ MOD/TOD/MXF in FCP? Convert the files into Final Cut Pro friendly codec first. As to the best codec for FCP editing, Apple ProRes 422 and Apple Intermediate Codec should be the top two codec packs. The following guide is written to help you out of such kind of importing errors.

Required software: Pavtube HD Video Converter for Mac About the software: This Mac HD Video Converter deals with HD shootings in file extensions of (*.mts, *.m2ts, *.mov, *.mxf, *.mod, *.tod, *.avi, *.mp4) taken with Sony, Panasonic, JVC and various other camcorders. The HD Video Converter exports FCP friendly codecs including Apple ProRes family (ProRes 422, ProRes 422 LT, ProRes 422 HQ, ProRes 422 Proxy, ProRes 4444), DVCPRO, HDV, Apple Intermediate codec, etc for Final Cut Pro post-production. You may download a trial of HD Video Converter for Mac software to try it out. Notice that the trial version puts a Pavtube logo on the screen.

Detailed guide of transcoding HD MTS/M2TS/MOV/ MOD/TOD/MXF to Apple ProRes 422/Apple Intermediate codec for Final Cut Pro:

1. Run the HD Video to FCP Converter for Mac. Click “Add” button and browse to the HD footages either from scratch disk or cam HDD for loading to the converter. If your source is MXF contents from P2 card, copy the MXF files to Mac hard disk first.

2. Click on “Format” bar and follow “Final Cut Pro” template to set a FCP friendly format. For Full HD 1080p AVCHD files, you are advised to Follow “Final Cut Pro” template and “Apple ProRes 422 (*.mov)” format. If you prefer smaller file size, choose “Apple ProRes 422 (LT) (*.mov)” instead. The “Apple ProRes 422 (Proxy) (*.mov)” format offers file size at SD levels and is recommended for 480i/p and 576i/p shootings. The “Apple ProRes 4444(*.mov)”
creates videos in lossless quality at huge file size, and is not recommended for home video making.

3. Click the “Settings” button and customize proper video/ audio parameters if necessary. Video size, bitrate and fame rate are flexible and can be adjusted as you like. E.g. Set video size to 1920*1080 when you feel like to keep 1080p as the source file features. Or set smaller bitrate to further cut down export file size. You may skip this step as well.

4. Click “Browse” button to set a location on your HDD for the output video file. Make sure there are enough disk space for saving generated files.

5. Click “Convert” to start transferring HD MTS/M2TS/ MOV/ MOD/TOD/MXF to Apple ProRes 422 codec. The conversion process may take long time due to huge file size but trust me– this Mac HD Video to FCP Converter is faster than most other video converter tools. After conversion just click the “Open” button to locate converted video files for importing to FCP. As Apple ProRes codecs are natively supported by FCP, the rendering time is saved as well.

Tip 1: AVCHD has a much higher compression ratio than Apple ProRes, so the ingested files are significantly larger than the original files. For example, a 2-minute native AVCHD file is about 200–300 MB. After transcoding to the Apple ProRes 422 codec, the file size can be as large as 2 GB.

Tip 2: Pavtube iMedia Converter for Mac

converts HD MTS/M2TS/ MOV/ MOD/TOD/MXF videos, common videos, DVD, and Blu-ray Disc to Apple ProRes 422 codec for Final Cut Pro and to MP4, MOV, M4V videos for QuickTime player, iTunes, iPad, iPhone, iPod, etc.

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Transcode Canon HF S20 MTS footage to Apple ProRes 422 for Editing in FCP on Mac OS X Lion

Final Cut Pro is really a powerful editing tool for mac users, most people use it for editing AVCHD .MTS or M2TS footage from a variety of camcorders. However, FCP isn’t able to import all AVCHD footage. It definitely cannot import AVCHD footage from specific Canon camcorders like Canon HF S20. The best solution to solve this problem is converting AVCHD/MTS to Apple Prores 422, which is compatibled well by Final Cut Pro.

I am a Canon HF S20 camcorder user. As you see, Canon HF S20 MTS files can not be accepted by FCP natively. In this case, a professional video converter is necessary. We can use Canon HF S20 MTS to FCP Converter to import MTS files from Canon to Final Cut Pro on Mac OS X Lion. Pavtube MTS to Final Cut Pro Converter is an all-in-one video converter on Mac OS X Leopard (10.5), Snow Leopard (10.6), Mac OS X Lion (10.7), The Mac video conversion software supports Apple ProRes encoding to help you quickly transcode any video to ProRes 422 for FCP, FCPX in a short time with quality lossless.

The following article will supply all the information you need to convert Canon .MTS files to FCP. At first, please make sure you have installed this Mac MTS to FCP converter on your computer. Then, just follow the guide to operate it.

Step 1. Capture MTS Videos from Canon HF S20 camcorder.

Connect Canon HF S20 camcorder to Mac, when prompted, choose .mts video clips. You can directly drag and drop MTS files to MTS to Final Cut Pro Converter for Mac or you can click “Add” button to import MTS files.

Step 2. Setting output format.

Click “Format > Final Cut Pro > Apple ProRes 422 (*.mov)” as output video format. You can slick “Setting”, set Video/audio prameters you need.

Step 3. Convert Canon HF S20 MTS to ProRes 422 for Editing with FCP.
Click “Convert” to start transcode MTS to Apple ProRes Codec on Mac Lion. The conversion time is determined by the file size. As far as I know, the Pavtube MTS to ProRes Converter for Mac OS X Lion os faster than most other MTS Conversion tool. And it will not bother to render the converted files in FCP. After conversion just click the “Open” button to locate converted video files for FCP post-production seamlessly.
Once the conversion is done, you could easily import the .mov files into Final Cut Pro X without rendering. Now you can edit Canon HF S20 MTS footage in FCP as you like.

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Transcode Canon XF100 MXF to ProRes for FCP X Editing on Mac OS X Lion
MXF to FCP X-Transcode Canon XF100 MXF to ProRes 422 mov

Final Cut Pro X has become the first choice for video editing for Mac users. Both professional videographers and amateurs find it a helpful and amazing editing system, although most users also find it very picky about what video formats you can import – almost QuickTime only. A newbie may feel disappinted when the FCP X failed to import recordings from Canon XF100 while experienced users will convert MXF video to Apple ProRes Codec .MOV as output video format more compatible with Final Cut Pro X.

Well, don’t blame to the Final Cut Pro X, the “Import from Camera…” option works just like “Log and Transfer”. The thing is, even FCP 7 does not work with the Canon XF codec. If you want to edit with MXF natively, get Adobe Premiere Pro CS5.5…Or convert the Canon MXF to something Final Cut Pro X can edit natively, say Apple ProRes 422 encoded MOV format.

obviously, We need a third-party tool to realize it. Pavtube HD Video Converter for Mac is a nice choice. The Canon XF100 MXF to FCP X Converter allows you to import MXF files from Canon to Final Cut Pro X on Mac OS X Lion. The MXF to Final Cut Pro X Converter is an all-in-one video converter on Mac OS X Leopard (10.5), Snow Leopard (10.6), Mac OS X Lion (10.7), it can convert HD videos from HD camcorders or DVs (like JVC, Panasonic, Sony and Cannon) for editing in Final Cut Pro, Final Cut Pro X, Final Cut Express, iMovie, Avid, Adobe Premiere etc. Now please follow its step-by-step instruction in the following contents. Here’s a detailed workaround for getting Canon MXF shootings into FCP X with the Mac MXF to ProRes Converter.

Preparation
1. Transfer the .mxf clips to Mac HDD.
2. Get Pavtube HD Video Converter for Mac ($35). Click here to download a trial.

Transcode/Convert Canon XF100 recordings to Apple ProRes 422

Step 1. Launch the Pavtube HD Video Converter. Click “Add” and browse to a Canon .mxf clip and the software will add it to file list. Repeat the operation to load multiple .mxf videos.

Step 2. Click on “Format” and choose “Final Cut Pro > Apple ProRes 422 (*.mov)”.

Step 3. Click “Convert” to start transcoding the Canon XF100 MPEG2 recordings to Apple ProRes / converting .mxf to .mov videos. After conversion click “Open” to find .mov videos.

Some more helpful features of the app:

1. Settings- click to set video resolution(1920×1080/1440×1080/1280×720/720×480), bitrate(from 1Mbps to 20Mbps), frame rate (24p/30p)

2. Editor (next to “Add” icon)- click to set deinterlace, denoise, mute, volume up, trim, crop, etc.

Load/Import converted Canon XF100 footage to Final Cut Pro X

Step 1. Start up Final Cut Pro X, follow “File > Import > Files”.

Step 2. Browse to the converted .mov video in the “Import Files” window. Press “Open” at the right bottom.

Now you can import Canon XF100 footage to FCP X successfully and get down to video editing. Wait- Why is there a Pavtube logo on the screen? Well, this is because I was using a trial version~~~

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MTS to FCP X-Transcode Canon Legria HF AVCHD MTS files to ProRes for FCP X editing

I have a HD camcorder-”Canon Legria HF M41″. I have shoot many videos… The M41 video files are AVCHD MTS format… import these MTS files to FCP X for some editing…But Final Cut Pro X don’t support AVCHD MTS editing. What should I do?

For HD Camcorder fans, you probably have similar problems about editing AVCHD MTS on FCP X Best solution is transcoding. ProRes 422 is a standard-definition and high-definition lossy video compression format developed by Apple Inc. So transcoding MTS to ProRes without rendering is our best choice. Thus we need a AVCHD MTS to ProRes Converter App. Here I recommend you try a Mac MTS to FCP X Converter from Pavtube Studio.

You can use the program to convert MTS to various Apple ProRes formats like Apple ProRes 422 (*.mov), Apple ProRes 422 (HQ) (*.mov), Apple ProRes 422 (LT) (*.mov). Morover, the powerful AVCHD MTS to ProRes Converter also supports to deinterlace your 1080i HD video by default.

You can Easily and fast convert and deinterlace the AVCHD MTS footage to ProRes with original quality for editing in FCP X. After downloading the free trial of MTS to FCP X Converter, install and run it. Then import MTS files to the Program. Follow “Format>Final Cut Pro > Apple ProRes 422 (*.mov)” to get the output format you need. Finally Click “Convert” button to start AVCHD MTS to ProRes Conversion.

Now, you are able to import converted MTS files to Final Cut Pro X for editing or rendering directly with ease.

Some Small wonderful Tips on the MTS to FCP X Converter.

1. Merge videos-Check “Merge into one file” next to the “Settings” button to join several .mts files into a single one.
2. “Edit” Camcorder 1080p HD Video Clips
Click on the “Edit” option icon, you will see a Video Editor panel where you are able to easily edit your 1080p/1080i/720p HD video by using several powerful editing functions.

Trim” video means you can trim off any unwanted part of a video.

Crop” video refers to you cut off unwanted part of the screen, such as removing and eliminate black bars (edges) on top and bottom of a video.

Click on “Effect” tab, you could find the “Deinterlacing” option checked by this AVHCD MTS to ProRes Converter. In other words, Pavtube Mac Video Converter helps you deinterlace your video by default automatically.

By the way, the “Mac MTS to ProRes Converter” (I called it Best HD Camcorder Mate) also can convert 1080p MTS to AIC MOV for FCE and iMovie editing. What’s more you can convert big .MTS files to smaller files if you want share these on our network and If some users want download files. Cause It´s better download smaller and common files like .WMV, . AVI etc. than big .MTS files.

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