View Full Version : Batch exporting single clips from timeline


Marcello Mazzilli
August 27th, 2018, 03:59 AM
I need to export only selected footage and clean it up. What I do is put all the raw footage in the timeline, one after the other, then trim clips, grade them, some will be stabilised or rotated, etc... At some point my timeline will have a sequence of perfect clips as I want them.

Now.. what is the fastest/easiest way to export them AS SINGLE CLIPS? I want all the effects on the clips to stay so I can't just drag the clips in the project window as fx will not get there. I want the clips to be separate so I can't export the whole timeline. Until now the only thing I can do is to select with IN - OUT the single clip (buy the way, seems to be a bug here because it exports the first frame of the last clip if you use the SHIFT MAGNET to find the out point) and then EXPORT -> QUEUE

Is there a faster way to batch export single clips with effects once you have them all in the timeline?

Luke Miller
August 29th, 2018, 05:38 PM
I have the same question. I found this tutorial:

Tutorial : How to Batch Export Multiple Clips in Premiere Pro - Editing - Cinematography.com (http://www.cinematography.com/index.php?showtopic=68325)

Marcello Mazzilli
September 1st, 2018, 01:52 AM
Thanks for the reply.
I had read about the NEST system but I believe this is still too long. You have to select NEST, give a name, etc... As I am marking my resulting timeline it is ALL made of good clips so this will mean to nest ONE BY ONE every clip. There has to be a better way

Luke Miller
September 1st, 2018, 08:09 AM
I agree that a better way is needed.

It seems the batch export function only works on sequences. The NEST function looks like it creates, in effect, a sequence containing the selected clips. My normal workflow is to import all the files and put them on the timeline in a single sequence. Now I'm thinking that I might put each file on its own sequence initially. After trimming and editing I can then batch export those sequences.

Marcello Mazzilli
September 1st, 2018, 08:19 AM
What you want to do is similar to nesting and probably nesting is better as you can do it AFTER. I find it useful to drag ALL the footage on the timeline and clean it up in sequence. Often I might delete a scene because I have another similar one, or I might want to grade similar scenes in the same way. That is why they need to be on the same timeline. If I am editing for a job that's fine as I will continue on the timeline and output only ONE clip.. but if I am cleaning footage to export as CLIPS (for example for my Shutterstock or Fotolia footage collection) I need to export single clips (but graded, trimmed, maybe even rotated etc)... and that doesn't seem possible yet.

Jan Klier
September 3rd, 2018, 05:17 AM
Maybe some day Adobe will add that functionality.

Unless you're particularly wedded to Premiere, this functionality has always existed in Resolve. During export simple select 'individual' clips and will do exactly that, with some extras around naming and timecode.

There are also other applications that specialize in the creation of dailies. This hasn't been exactly Premiere's home turf.

Marcello Mazzilli
September 3rd, 2018, 05:39 AM
Thanks that is good to know. I will try

Steven Digges
September 12th, 2018, 10:40 PM
Best way I know how, pretty easey. Use the "work area bar". You may have to turn on its visibility on in the sequence menu if you cant see it in the latest CC.

Select your in and out point cuts one at a time with the "work area" bar. Hit export, select "work area" in the export window. Name the clip. Select Queue. Go back to the sequence and move the work area bar to the next cut. Each "work area" cut you put into the media encoder will export individually with the name you gave it.

Kind Regards,

Steve

Marcello Mazzilli
September 12th, 2018, 11:20 PM
That is what I have been doing until now. Long and dull. Also latest versions have a small “bug” because SHIFT+Click next to the end of the clip will leave the first frame of the next clip in the work bar selection so you have to manually go back one clip every time.

Steven Digges
September 12th, 2018, 11:32 PM
Leave a space between the cuts and it wont add that frame.

Marcello Mazzilli
September 13th, 2018, 01:18 AM
It will add a black one