1 | |
2 | Describe the basic video editing workflow. |
3 | What purpose does the Project panel serve? |
4 | How can nested sequences simplify your editing? |
5 | What goes on in the Monitors? |
6 | How and why do you create a floating window? |
1 | Premiere Pro lets you place video, audio, and graphics anywhere on a sequence (timeline), rearrange media clips within a sequence, add transitions, apply effects, and do any number of other video editing steps in just about any order that suits you. |
2 | Shoot your video; transfer it to your PC; create a sequence of video, audio and still clips on the timeline; apply effects and transitions; add text and graphics; edit your audio; and export the finished product. |
3 | You store and organize links to your media assets in the Project panel. |
4 | A sequence can be an entire project or a project segment. Sometimes it's easier to work on one segment of a larger project, then nest that sequence into the final project sequence. Breaking up your project into constituent parts can make your work easier. |
5 | You use the Monitors to view your project and your original clips. When working with two MonitorsSource and Programyou can view and trim your raw footage in the Source Monitor and use the Program Monitor to view the timeline sequence as you build it. |
6 | Frequently you need much more real estate when working in a panel. The Effect Controls panel can display enough parameters to fill a full screen. To expand your view of a panel, hold down the Ctrl key while dragging a panel tab to create a floating window. |