Premiere CS6 and earlier have a host-side problem where they sometimes fail to fully enable or fully disable parameters in response to other parameter changes. Parameter Enabling/Disabling in Premiere CS6īCC frequently enables/disables individual parameters within the effect control pane to help make clear which parameters are relevant in a particular configuration.
To ensure Premiere renders internally at full resolution and then resizes as a secondary post-processing step you can enable Premiere’s “maximum render quality” option. Some filters that are highly resolution dependent such as BCC Match Grain will even render warning messages when used at less than full resolution. When rending in Premiere to a final resolution that is lower than the project’s main resolution, the Premiere host will render all effects at lower resolution internally which can cause some effects to generate significantly different results than if rendered at full resolution and resized afterwards. Rendering at less than full resolution in Premiere You can still apply the older “effect-style” versions of the transitions from the Video Effects group to individual clips if desired but in general these are presented mainly for compatibility with older versions of BCC and for projects created with older versions of Premiere. For standard transition work – applying single track NLE transitions – you should use the BCC filters from the Video Transitions group. In Premiere CC you will now see two separate BCC Transitions folders – one under Premiere’s “Video Effects” group and one under Premiere’s “Video Transitions” group. Historically BCC has always offered some “transition-style” effects in Premiere but with BCC 9 in Premiere CC we now offer true NLE-style single-track transitions.
This document provides additional guidance for working with BCC in Adobe After Effects and Premiere.