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December 13, 2005

Ripping DVDs For Edit In Final Cut Pro and Avid Xpress Pro

DVDtoQt.jpg There is alot of confusion circulating around the discussion forums on the topic of finding an efficient way to extract material from a DVD to import into Final Cut Pro for re-editing. After doing some research, I found such a ware that will allow you to read the dvd > set in and out points for the scenes that you want > and extract that video in a format that can be taken into Final Cut Pro and Avid. If you already have pre-existing VOB files, you can read them through DVDXDV and extract from them as well. Keep in mind that this ware is for Macs only.

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DVDXDV Pro will allow you to extract high quality audio and video from a DVD to be used in Final Cut Pro and Avid. Their are two versions of this software, DVDXDVPro ($80), which is the more robust version of the program that will allow the reversal of the original interlaced field ordering of a DVD, widescreen resizing, 3:2 pulldown removal, and multi-channel audio export.

DVDXDV ($25) is being marketed more to the home video crowd and not the video professional. It will allow you to kick out a quicktime file with all audio in this version being exported as a stereo mix, it also allows for video cropping and resizing and field order reversing. There is also an 'Expert Settings' option in the Export dialog that will allow you to manipulate compression settings.

After downloading the trial version of DVDXDV Pro, my initial response was that it would be well worth the wait of shipping. You don't have access to an instant download of the ware if you should decide to purchase it, but I imported some extremely high quality audio and Video into Final Cut Pro and Avid from this ware!

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If you find yourself needing to use material from premade non-encrypted dvds, you should really give DVDXDV Pro and DVDXDV serious consideration. If you have Quicktime 6 or later,click here to see a video sample of the process of how you get DVD material into Final Cut Pro. Download the free trial version and see if its right for you!

Posted by MovingPicture at December 13, 2005 05:24 PM

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