![]() That's really why (mumbles) So you notice, thank you very much, as now they're not there, gives me some extra real estate. First of all, if you do not like these buttons at all, you can go here, and if you want more real estate, you can just go ahead and uncheck. And this allows me to do a couple of things. Gonna go back and make this fit into the window. Well this is actually something that, again, a lot of people don't go into. Let's see what other little tricks that I use. If you select a clip and try it, basically it's just like hitting a key that doesn't do anything. And it works with in and out points, not with selecting a clip. That is a lot easier than grabbing them, dragging them up to another track, dragging them down, figuring out where you want them later. Command + V paste, and now I've pasted them to another part of my timeline. It still is being held in the mysterious world of the clipboard. But I want to go ahead, and I want to put it here at the end of my timeline. Okay? I want to extract it, because I don't want to leave a space. So I may want to move a big chunk from here. So if I do an extract, I can go ahead to another part of my timeline, and hit Command + V, and paste back everything I removed. And if you look at the screen it actually saves what you extracted in the clipboard. Now what's interesting, is when you do an extract. If I use the semicolon key, it removes everything between the in and the out point, but leaves the gap. So, I'm pretty sure these are the ones, if I hit the apostrophe, it removes everything between the in and the out points, and closes the space. They're the semi-colon and the apostrophe. And the extract, and the lift tools, are on your keyboard next to J, K and L. And this can be within the body of a clip, or this can actually be a row of multiple clips. And it doesn't work with clip selection, it works with marking of in and out points. But there is also something called a lift edit, and an extract edit. It removes it, and ripples, and closes the space. ![]() I think it's Option + Delete on a Mac, or Command. If I hold the modifier, and it's different for Windows and Mac. So if I select a clip, and I just put the play head over the clip and I hit the Delete key, we saw we can remove any clip that's selected. There's a couple different ways that you can remove clips. Features: Premiere Pro 2021 and above Compatible Project. Except in dark bars of nerds who teach Premiere Pro. That's again, one of the really really cool features that nobody really talks about. And that's really pretty slick, you want to switch out a shot, but you don't want to deal with copying and pasting all the effects that you did on the first shot, you can simply drag it, hold down the Option key, let go on top of the other clip, and you've done a replace edit and kept all the original effects. But if I drag it on top, and I hold down, I believe it's the Option key, and let go, what it does is, it replaces the clip, but it keeps all of the effects from the original clip, and puts it on the new clip. and it just replaced it, it's like a perfect replace edit. So I could go ahead, and I could drag this wine image. I can replace this with something called a replace edit, by simply dragging another image onto it. But I just wanted to have an effect on the clip. (mumbles) Don't know, it took it that time. It's just being difficult, it's the end of the day. ![]() ![]() It could be a directional, an omni, a spotlight. And I can make this a little bit bigger for you guys in the back row of the class. Let's go ahead, I actually wanna get where that light is. I can actually move where that spotlight is. I now have the option to put a different type of light on it. Take this thing, I can double-click it, I'm gonna throw it on this clip. You don't have to buy a third party plugin. People don't know lighting effects are in here. Adobe says that it is ‘coming soon,’ but we don’t have any timeframe or hard date, unfortunately.Lighting effects. I am excited to get the update and try out these new features. One area of video that has always given me issues was color correction and modification and this looks to make it not only simpler and easier, but more familiar and with an interface that I am already very comfortable with from using Lightroom. The new color correction panel is called the ‘Lumetri Color Panel’ and it gives you Lightroom-esqe controls for modifying the color and look of your footage right from the Premiere Pro CC itself.Īs I am starting to do more and more video, I think that this is pretty awesome. Obviously, if you are doing any kind of serious color correction, you will want to use a dedicated program like Davinci Resolve or Adobe Speedgrade, but if you just need to make some quick adjustments, or color tweaks, these new upgrades appear to be quite sufficient.
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