Click on any phrase to play the video from that point.
[CS6]
[Al Mooney] [Product Manager, Pro Video Editing] We introduced the Warp Stabilizer
with After Effects in CS5.5, and a hugely successful release that was.
But editors have asked us to have the Warp Stabilizer
built into Premiere Pro to avoid the need for dynamically linking out to After Effects,
so we've done just that.
Now, to this shot here, I've actually already applied the Warp Stabilizer
just so you don't have to watch a progress bar,
but I've temporarily disabled it, so let's just have a quick look at this shot.
And as you can see, it's incredibly shaky,
almost as if it's been done intentionally.
So, all I need to do is go into my Effects panel,
find the Warp Stabilizer, and apply it to the shot.
Like I said, I already have,
so I'm just going to jump into my Effect Controls panel and re-enable it.
Now, the great thing about the Warp Stabilizer is while it does give you
huge control over the parameters of the stabilization
very often we find people telling us that they just need to drop the effect on,
and with the default parameters they're happy with the results.
Let's have a look at what this shot looks like now with the Warp Stabilizer applied.
As you can see, that's really smoothed out that shake,
makes it look like almost as if it was shot on a steady cam
just with the simple application of that Warp Stabilizer effect.
Another common problem, of course, especially for cameras
with CMOS sensors is rolling shutter,
so what we've also done in CS6 is added a built in
rolling shutter repair filter, so if I just scrub left and right on this clip
you can see those vertical lines kind of skewing left and right
as the CMOS sensor moves.
All I would need to do is apply the rolling shutter repair filter.
I've already done that, so let's just enable it,
and if you just look in the program monitor there straight away you can see those lines straightening up, and that's corrected in both pan directions, so the rolling shutter problem is gone. Rolling shutter is also part of Warp Stabilizer, but we've added it as a separately addressable effect if you just need to apply it to that type of problem. [Adobe]
and if you just look in the program monitor there straight away you can see those lines straightening up, and that's corrected in both pan directions, so the rolling shutter problem is gone. Rolling shutter is also part of Warp Stabilizer, but we've added it as a separately addressable effect if you just need to apply it to that type of problem. [Adobe]

