Monday 28 January 2013

Project settings


Project settings
Project settings fall into three basic categories: how time is displayed in the project, how color data is treated in the project, and what sampling rate
to use for audio. Of these settings, the color settings are the ones that you need to think about before you do much work in your project, because
they determine how color data is interpreted as you import footage files, how color calculations are performed as you work, and how color data is
converted for final output. See Color management and Timecode and time display units.
If you enable color management for your project, the colors that you see are the same colors that your audience will see when they view the
movie that you create.
Note: Click the color depth indicator at the bottom of the Project panel to open the Project Settings dialog box. Alt-click (Windows) or Option-click
(Mac OS) to cycle through color bit depths: 8 bpc, 16 bpc, and 32 bpc. See Color depth and high dynamic range color.
Composition settings
After you prepare and import footage items, you use these footage items to create layers in a composition, where you animate and apply effects.
When you create a composition, specify composition settings such as resolution, frame size, and pixel aspect ratio for your final rendered output.
Although you can change composition settings at any time, it’s best to set them correctly as you create each new composition to avoid unexpected
results in your final rendered output. For example, the composition frame size should be the image size in the playback medium. See Composition
settings.
If you’ll be rendering and exporting a composition to more than one media format, always match the pixel dimensions for your composition to
the largest pixel dimensions used for your output. Later, you can use output modules in the Render Queue panel to encode and export a
separate version of the composition for each format. See Output modules and output module settings.
Performance, memory, and storage considerations
If you work with large compositions, make sure that you configure After Effects and your computer to maximize performance. Complex
compositions can require a large amount of memory to render, and the rendered movies can take a large amount of disk space to store. Before
you attempt to render a three-hour movie, make sure that you have the disk space available to store it. See Storage requirements for output files.
If your source footage files are on a slow disk drive (or across a slow network connection), then performance will be poor. When possible, keep
the source footage files for your project on a fast local disk drive. Ideally, you’ll have three drives: one for source footage files, one from which the
application runs, and one for rendered output.
For more information, see Improve performance and Memory & Multiprocessing preferences.

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