Jenshannon16 wrote: “if I need to reshoot my course, is there a way to record the DSLR and iPad screen at the same time directly into Premiere Pro?” IOS and macOS screen recordings tend to be captured at 60 fps, not 30fps, but I think it shows up as 53.02 fps because of it being variable frame rate. (Adobe Media Encoder can transcode, but I’m not clear on whether it can convert VFR into CFR or just preserves whatever the clip started as.) and then import the result into Premiere Pro. For better sync, transcode the clip to Constant Frame Rate using an application such as Handbrake (free), ffWorks (paid), etc. This is consistent with what Steve_Griffiths is saying. Properties reports the iPad Pro screen recording as 53.02 frames per second and Variable Frame Rate Detected. Just to add info to this, I did a screen recording on my iPad Pro and looked at the Properties in Premiere Pro. Is there a fix to this or do I need to reshoot my course? And if I need to reshoot my course, is there a way to record the DSLR and iPad screen at the same time directly into Premiere Pro? My DSLR is set to 60fps (which I now reliaze should have been on 30fps) and my iPad apparently records at about 30 fps. The first few minutes lines perfectly but then just starts lagging behind the DSRL. I believe it has something to do with the frame rate, but everything I've done to attempt to fix it has not worked so I think I'm just doing the wrong thing. When I pull them both into Premiere Pro and begin editing, my screen recording ends up significantly off from the DSLR footage. I used my DSLR to record me drawing on the iPad in Procreate and used my iPad to screen record at the same time. I am have recorded a course I want to publish. I think I have the basics down but I can't seem to find an answer to this issue and am hoping someone here can point me in the right direction.
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