AudioMasters
 
  User Info & Key Stats   
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
November 09, 2007, 04:29:46 PM
62056 Posts in 6134 Topics by 2106 Members
Latest Member: RayH
News:   | Forum Rules
+  AudioMasters
|-+  Audio Related
| |-+  Radio, TV and Video Production
| | |-+  Newbie trying to edit .vob file
  « previous next »
Pages: [1] Print
Author
Topic: Newbie trying to edit .vob file  (Read 676 times)
« on: June 13, 2007, 03:55:47 PM »
fess40 Offline
Member
*****
Posts: 9



Little background... the video department at the local University helped shoot my wife's music video.  The video quality was good, but I think they rushed the final product to get home (we got it back the day they left for summer).  At times the track doesn't match the video (off beat, japanese translation type stuff).  I got a dvd with extra footage but I can't seem to do anything with it.  I figured I could do that good, so I'm giving it a try.  I'm using Adobe Premiere Elements, but it can't read a .vob file.  Any suggestions?  They also gave me a little digital video tape that I have no means of playing.  I'm assuming it's the same footage, but it would be the correct file type, right?  Her current single is #15 this month on the Christian Country Charts, and I need to get this ironed out before her next release in August.  Thanks!
Logged
Reply #1
« on: June 13, 2007, 09:27:17 PM »
frugal Offline
Member
*****
Stop the world...this isn't my bus. Posts: 141

WWW

The small tape is most likely miniDV.  Your best bet is to borrow a miniDV camcorder from someone, hook it up via firewire, and transfer the video to your PC for editing.  If you must use the DVD then...try renaming the .vob file as .mpg.  I don't have Premiere (elements or otherwise) but some programs have been known to read DVD files with that workaround.  If that fails you'll either need to extract the MPEG video data from the vob file (DVD ripper software) or find an editor that will work right from the DVD.  I use Sony Vegas 6 which does import from DVDs (I assume do to the proliferation of DVD camcorders).
You really will be better off though pulling the video from the DV tape.  DVD uses MPEG2 lossy compression.  It's fine as a delivery format but not great for editing.
JTC
 smiley
Logged

The Frugal Audio Guy
www.FrugalAudio.com
Reply #2
« on: June 14, 2007, 10:37:36 AM »
BFM Offline
Member
*****
Posts: 847



Ever heard of Google?

http://www.google.co.uk/search?hl=en&q=edit+VOB&meta=

I got all these hits with a simple search: edit VOB
Logged
Reply #3
« on: June 14, 2007, 05:37:05 PM »
fess40 Offline
Member
*****
Posts: 9



Yes, I did a search, but I wasn't having any luck with the various programs they were suggesting.  As it turns out by simply renaming the extension as mpg, Premiere can import it with with no problem.  Now I just have to learn how to run it.  grin

thanks
Logged
Reply #4
« on: June 15, 2007, 10:54:30 AM »
BFM Offline
Member
*****
Posts: 847



Cool  grin   Premiere can seem a bit daunting but it's a really nice program, and it also integrates with Audition, so for example you can 'send' the audio of your video in Premiere straight to Audition without having to export it first .. but always work with copies of your files when doing this ok!
Logged
Reply #5
« on: June 18, 2007, 03:31:40 PM »
fess40 Offline
Member
*****
Posts: 9



Great, thanks for the tip!
Logged
Pages: [1] Print 
« previous next »
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS! Ig-Oh Theme by koni.