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As well as exporting your project content from Adobe Prelude to an XML file
or to a Premiere Pro project just using the regular Export dialog box,
there's a really lovely workflow for sending things just directly to Premiere Pro live
while you've got the 2 applications running on your machine.
So here I am inside of Adobe Prelude, and I've got Adobe Premiere Pro poised,
ready and waiting to receive some media.
In fact, I'll just switch to the complete version of this project. Here we go.
And now let's go back to Prelude and send some stuff over.
Let's say, for example, I'm working on this rough cut and I think,
"Wouldn't it be great if I could just carry on working on this now
"inside of Adobe Premiere Pro?"
Well, I can select the rough cut in the Project panel,
and I can either right click and choose Send to Premiere Pro
or I can go to the File menu and choose Send to Premiere Pro. Either way.
If I right click, for example, nothing appears to happen right away,
but if I bring up Adobe Premiere Pro, automatically now I've got each of the clips
that were included in this rough cut and a new sequence,
a regular Premiere Pro sequence, which I can open up
ready for me to carry on working.
And I can do the same thing if I go back to Adobe Prelude
where I can select, for example, a bin containing some media.
So I'll right click, Send to Premiere Pro, jump back to Premiere Pro.
There's the bin, and I can now carry on working with my media.
In fact, while I'm here, why don't I just go back to Prelude
and just select everything in 1 step?
File, Send to Premiere Pro, go over to Premiere Pro,
and there is the entire contents of my Prelude project.
So you really can use Adobe Prelude to prepare your media
and--and this is an important thing--you can organize your media.
As an editor, it's always a bit of a pain, it's a lot of work,
but it's very important to organize your clips, put them into specific bins,
name those bins, just put everything whether it's by scene or by source tape number.
Whatever the design for the organization of your project,
it's a big help to have that done in advance. And now you can.
You can use Adobe Prelude to build the architecture of your Project panel,
get everything into the right bins, and then just select everything with Control A
or Command A, right click, and Send to Premiere Pro.
And Premiere Pro will just take it from there.
So that's how you can send clips and rough cuts directly to Premiere Pro CS6
from Adobe Prelude.

