This lesson walks you through the process of creating and editing titles with the Premiere Pro Title tool. We'll look at two examples that use several of the options and settings.
Before getting started in Premiere Pro, it’s important to get familiar with the core interface. In this movie, Abba Shapiro identifies the four primary windows—the Source Monitor, the Program Monitor, the Timeline, and the Project panel. He discusses the roles that each of these panels play in organizing, previewing, marking, laying out, and editing video.
Adjusting Premiere Pro Preferences And Other Settings
In this Infinite Skills Adobe Premiere Pro CS6 video for beginners, author Jeff Sengstack gives a detailed insight into adjusting your preferences in Premiere Pro.
In this Infinite Skills Adobe Premiere Pro CS6 video for beginners, author Jeff Sengstack gives a comprehensive insight into using the Ripple and Rolling Edits Tool.
Learn about the new user interface for viewing or changing keyboard shortcuts in Adobe Premiere Pro. Then, discover some of the new shortcuts for common editing commands, such as matching frames, creating and playing loops, moving between editing clips, and exporting frames.
In this video you'll see how markers have been improved in Premiere Pro CS6. You'll also get an overview of Adobe Prelude and how markers can be imported from Prelude to Premiere Pro.
In this video you'll see how the Project panel, Media Browser panel, and default workspace have changed to make it easier to find and trim assets easier. You'll also learn how to use the new Hover Scrub feature to quickly preview and trim clips.
Sharing Clips and Rough Cuts Directly with Adobe Premiere Pro CS6
One of the most elegant features of Prelude is its ability
to integrate directly into Adobe Premiere Pro. This lesson shows you how to instantly share clips, subclips, and Rough Cuts with Adobe Premiere Pro.
In this video you'll see how to send a Premiere Pro
sequence to Adobe SpeedGrade for color grading and get a very brief overview of applying a look in SpeedGrade.
The Three-Way Color Corrector effect has been redesigned to make color correction easier, especially secondary color correction. In this video you'll see how to make the most of it.
The limitation on the number of camera angles in a multicamera sequence has been removed in Premiere Pro CS6. In this video you'll see just how easy it is to create a new multicamera sequence and switch between camera angles.
In this video you'll see how fast and robust Dynamic Link has become and learn about the ability of After Effects and Premiere Pro to work together, even without being part of a suite package.
Explore the improved audio controls in Adobe Premiere Pro. Learn about the repositionable VU Meter, the Audio Mixer panel, and the ability to monitor solo, mono, and stereo content.
In this movie, learn about the darker user interface and more vibrant, higher contrast colors in the Timeline of Adobe Premiere Pro. Also, see how the Timeline is more easily controlled by the mouse scroll wheel and the redesigned moving and scaling control.
In this movie, it’s time to get started with an editing project. The first step is to import media—all of the raw video, photographs, and audio that will be edited together into a final movie. Abba Shapiro demonstrates how to import individual files, or complete folders full of media. He explains how files are stored and linked to a project. He also demonstrates how to browse and preview clips on the hard drive before importing them into Premiere Pro.
Explore the cleaner, more efficient interface design of the Source and Program Monitors. Learn about the customizable transport controls and the easy-access playback resolution.
There is a lot of information about clips and sequences to be found in the Timeline with a few clicks. This movie demonstrates how to show and hide essential information that will help with the decision-making process during editing. This includes audio waveforms and keyframe controls right in the Timeline. It also covers different options for thumbnail previews of the clips in the Timeline and methods for enlarging and shrinking certain areas of the Timeline for greater control.
Using shortcuts for a fluid, high-performance workflow
This movie demonstrates how keyboard shortcuts can speed up the editing process for a more powerful editing workflow. Learn about the trimming, ripple trimming, slipping, and sliding commands, as well as tips for customizing keyboard shortcuts.
The Timeline is where clips are edited together to create a complete narrative. In this movie, Abba Shapiro demonstrates the basic techniques to get started trimming clips and laying them out in the Timeline. He starts by browsing clips in the Project panel. Then he previews and trims clips in the Source Monitor before adding them into the Timeline to begin an edit.
When it comes to performing precise edits without changing the timing of other clips on the Timeline, a three-point edit is a mainstay. Abba Shapiro shows how to perform a three-point edit to place a clip into the Timeline in an exact potion with an exact trim length.
In addition to using in and out marks to add or remove video and audio, you can use the segments themselves. This lesson shows you the two ways you can remove complete clip segments from a sequence.
One of the most asked-for features in Premiere Pro CS6 is JKL Dynamic Trimming. This powerful feature dramatically speeds up trimming on the Timeline, as you'll see in this lesson.
Most of the time, when you make adjustments to your media, you'll do it using Premiere Pro's trimming controls. This lesson shows you several of the ways you can adjust the start and end points of your clips.
Premiere Pro CS6 includes several features designed to help you edit quickly and precisely with the keyboard, including the new trim mode, dynamic trimming commands, and JKL trimming commands. You'll learn how to apply these to your work in this video.
In this video you'll see how easy it is to create a sequence with settings that match those of your footage, and learn why this is a good idea for performance and quality.
This movie shows how the multi-cam editing process has been expanded to include more camera angles and a dynamic multi-cam source monitor. It also shares some computer considerations to keep in mind when editing multi-cam footage.
This lesson walks you through the process of creating and editing titles with the Premiere Pro Title tool. We'll look at two examples that use several of the options and settings.
Technically, even a straight cut is a transition, but for video editing, we usually think of a transition as a special effect than blends one image into another. This lesson shows you how to add, adjust, and remove special transition effects.
This movie introduces the robust audio tools in Premiere Pro. Abba Shapiro shows how to preview and trim audio in the Source Monitor. Whether it’s an audio-only file or the audio channel of a video clip, Abba shows how to enable sub-frame audio scrubbing and trimming. He also shows how to interpret clips to combine or separate stereo channels. At the same time, he introduces fundamental audio tools that are essential to working with audio in Premiere Pro.
Sequence nesting is a powerful but simple compositing technique. In a nutshell, you put one sequence inside another – but there is so much more to it than that, as you'll see in this lesson.
Understanding the enhanced effects workflows in Adobe Premiere Pro CS6
This movie showcases the drag-and-drop video effects, effect acceleration, and video adjustment layer controls in Adobe Premiere Pro CS6. It also shows the new Mercury Playback Engine's ability to play back effects with no dropped frames. Finally, it goes on to show how to effectively render out playback when needed.
In this Infinite Skills Adobe Premiere Pro CS6 video for beginners, author Jeff Sengstack shows you how to change the time of your clips, use reverse, fast-forward and slow motion effects
The Warp Stabilizer effect is very useful for removing unwanted camera movement from footage, especially wobbly handheld shots. You'll get a demonstration of this amazing new feature in this video.
In this video you'll see how easy it is to repair rolling shutter artifacts, which are common in footage from DSLRs and mobile phone cameras, using the new Rolling Shutter Repair effect.
Editing with RED & Adobe Premiere Pro: Edit up to 5k with ease
Learn how to use RED files natively in your Adobe Premiere Pro CS6 workflow. Get the most from RED Epic and Scarlet cameras and achieve seamless workflows with REDCINE-X.
Set up CS6 Production Premium for speed and efficiency. Join partners HP, AJA, and G-Tech to learn how to extend the capabilities of Adobe Premiere Pro CS6 & After Effects CS6 with powerful hardware add-ons.
Discover Adobe Prelude, an application that works in conjunction with Adobe Premiere Pro. Adobe Prelude allows video professionals, like producers and directors, to easily add metadata to their video files in a digital workflow.