Using Object Mount with Adobe Premiere Pro

Object Mount makes it easy to browse, import, and edit footage directly from S3-compatible storage in Adobe Premiere Pro. Whether you're working with local proxies, editing remotely, or centralising project media, Object Mount integrates smoothly into your editing pipeline.


Once you've mounted your object storage with Object Mount, your volume will appear like a standard drive in File Explorer (Windows) or Finder (macOS). From there, you can work as usual in Premiere Pro with just a few things to keep in mind.

1. Importing Footage

  • Go to File > Import, or use the Media Browser
  • Navigate to your Object Mount drive and select your files
  • Footage can be previewed and scrubbed before importing

If you notice slower performance with large files or over remote networks, consider using proxy workflows.


While Object Mount enables direct-from-cloud editing, Premiere Pro still benefits from local cache for smooth playback and faster timeline scrubbing.

Suggested settings:

  • File > Project Settings > Scratch Disks

    • Set Media Cache and Previews to a fast local SSD
  • Preferences > Media Cache

    • Enable Auto delete cache files older than X days to keep things tidy
  • Create Proxies via Ingest Settings or manually using the Project panel

    • Store proxies on a local drive
    • Set Proxy File Format to ProRes Proxy or H.264 Low Res for faster performance
  • Enable Toggle Proxies in the Program Monitor to switch views on the fly


Relinking Media

If a project was opened on a different machine or the mount point has changed:

  • Go to File > Link Media
  • Browse to your Object Mount volume
  • Premiere will relink to all matching file paths automatically

{% callout type="info"} Object Mount maintains consistent folder structures across platforms, which makes relinking straightforward. {% /callout }


Performance Tips

  • Stick to List View in Media Browser when browsing large folders
  • Use proxies for multicam or high-resolution editing (e.g. 4K, RAW)
  • Avoid saving the Premiere project file directly to the Object Mount drive — store locally and backup to cloud separately if needed

Storage Visibility

Your Object Mount volume will show up like this:

  • On macOS: Under Locations in Finder
  • On Windows: As a mapped drive under This PC

Once mounted, there’s no need to sync or copy files — you’re working live from the source.


Reminder on Write Operations

Premiere Pro reads from cloud storage efficiently, but for best results:

  • Keep render outputs, scratch files, and auto-saves on a local drive
  • Use Object Mount for read access to source footage
  • Export final renders locally, then upload back to your storage if needed

Previous
Object Mount with DaVinci Resolve
Next
Linux