Adobe Premiere Pro Render Options: Max depth, render quality, frame blending, use previews, explained
Digital Rebellion recently published an excellent explanation of Adobe Premiere Pro's render choices. We thought it was important to let you know about it. The explanation explains what the choices 'Render at Maximum Depth,' 'Use Maximum Render Quality,' 'Use Frame Blending,' and 'Use Previews' do and why they're useful.
For instance, here's what Digital Rebellion has to say about 'Render at Maximum Depth':
This produces content with a color depth of 32 bits. Although only a few output formats support 32-bit color, processing at this depth can yield better results for compositing and effects before being scaled back to the output format's bit depth. It can decrease or eliminate artifacts and banding in your video, but at the expense of increased processing time, so use it only when absolutely essential.
This option may be useful in the following situations:
- The bit depth of the source media is higher than the bit depth of the output format.
- Your sequence has a lot of layered effects or heavy compositing (particularly layered color corrections)
- The photographs in your series are either very high contrast or very low contrast (for example subtle gradients)

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