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Chapter 2 ADOBE PREMIERE PRO CS4

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Page 1: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Chapter 2 ADOBE PREMIERE PRO CS4

Page 2: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

User interfaceAdobe video and audio applications provide a consistent,

customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such as Project and Timeline), you move and group panels in the same way across products.

The main window of a program is the application window. Panels are organized in this window in an arrangement called a workspace. The default workspace contains groups of panels as well as panels that stand alone.

You customize a workspace by arranging panels in the layout that best suits your working style. As you rearrange panels, the other panels resize automatically to fit the window. You can create and save several custom workspaces for different tasks—for example, one for editing and one for previewing.

Page 3: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Application window Grouped panels

Individual panel

A

BC

C -

B -

A-

Page 4: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Choose a workspace

Open the project you want to work on, choose Window > Workspace, and select the desired workspace.

Dock, group, or float panels

Page 5: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Open, close, and scroll to panelsTo open or close a panel, choose it from the

Window menu. To close a panel or window, click its Close button

.

To see all the panel tabs in a narrow panel group, drag the horizontal scroll bar.

Page 6: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Start or open a project

Page 7: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

import video and audioUsing the Media Browser you can import files

from computer sources in any of the leading media formats. Each file you capture or import automatically becomes a clip in the Project panel.

File --- Import ---Browse –select the video or audio

Page 8: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Assemble and refine a sequenceUsing the Source Monitor, you can view clips, set

edit points, and mark other important frames before adding clips to a sequence. For convenience, you can break a master clip into any number of sub clips, each with its own In and Out points.

Page 9: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

You add clips to a sequence in a Timeline panel by dragging or by using controls in the Source Monitor. You can automatically assemble clips into a sequence that reflects their order in the Project panel. You can view the edited sequence in the Program Monitor.

Page 10: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Creating subclipsA subclip is a section of a source clip that you want to edit and manage separately in your project. You can use subclips to organize long media files.You work with subclips in a Timeline panel as you do with master clips. Trimming and editing a subclip is constrained by its start and end points. However, you can set new In and Out points for a subclip, as long as they fall between the original In and Out points you set for the subclip when you create it from the master clip.

Page 11: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Create a subclip from the Project panel You can create a subclip from source clips or other subclips that are made up from a single media file.

Double-click a clip in the Project panel to open it in the Source Monitor.

Set In points and Out points in the Source MonitorTo set an In Point or Out point in the Source Monitor,

do any of the following:

To mark an In point, drag the playhead to the frame you want. Then click the Set In Point button .

To mark an Out point, drag the playhead to the frame you want. Then click the Set Out Point button .

Page 12: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Adding clips to sequences

You can add clips to a sequence in the following ways:•Drag the clip from the Project panel or Source Monitor to a Timeline panel or the Program Monitor.

Use the Insert and Overlay buttons in the Source Monitor to add clips to a Timeline panel. Or use the keyboard shortcuts associated with those buttons.

Automatically assemble a sequence from the Project panel. An overlay edit adds a clip by replacing any frames

already in a sequence starting from the edit point and extending for the length of the clip. Overlay is the default method when dragging a clip to a sequence or when rearranging clips in a sequence.Adding a

Page 13: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Cont…

Page 14: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Drag video only or audio only to a sequence

To perform an overlay edit, drag the clip from the Source Monitor or Project panel to an appropriate track in a Timeline panel at the point you want the clip to start. The destination area is highlighted, and the pointer appears with the Overlay icon

In the Source Monitor, do one of the following:To drag all audio and video tracks of the clip, drag from

anywhere inside the main viewing area.To drag only the video track of the clip, drag from the Drag Video

Only icon .To drag only the audio tracks, first target in the Timeline panel

the tracks you want to receive the clip audio tracks. Then map the audio tracks you want to use to the target audio tracks. Then, drag from the Drag Audio Only icon

Note (if you want to separate between video and audio (right click – unlink)

Page 15: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Remove source clip In point or Out point

Double-click a source clip in a Project panel to open it in the Source Monitor.

Choose Marker > Clear Clip Marker and

then choose an option to clear the In point, the Out point, or both.

Page 16: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Snap clipsTo make it easier to align clips with one another

or with particular points in time, you can activate the snap feature. With Snap on, when you move a clip, it automatically aligns with, or snaps to, the edge of another clip.

Enable and disable the snap featureAt the upper left of a Timeline panel under the

Sequence tab, click the Snap button to select it. Click it again to deselect it.

Page 17: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Creating titles

Do one of the following:Choose File > New > Title.Choose Title > New Title and then choose a title

type.In the Project panel, press the New Item button

and choose Title.Specify a name for the title and click OK.Use the text and shape tools to create a new file

or to customize a template.Close the Titler or save the project to save the

title.

Page 18: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Create a title based on the current title

In the Titler, open or select the title on which you want to base a new title.

In the Title Quick Properties panel, click New Title Based On Current Title .

In the New Title dialog box, enter a name for the new title and click OK.

Make any changes to the new title.Close the Titler or save the project to

save the title.

Page 19: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Creating titles from templates

Page 20: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Creating a title roll or crawl

Page 21: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Creating a title roll or crawl

Page 22: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Creating a title roll or crawl

Page 23: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Adding Transitions

Page 24: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Adding Effects

Page 25: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Adding Effects

Page 26: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such

Exporting to various formats using Adobe Media Encoder

Page 27: User interface Adobe video and audio applications provide a consistent, customizable workspace. Although each application has its own set of panels (such