Adobe 25520388 User Guide - Page 34

Online resources for Premiere Pro and Photoshop workflow, Comparative advantages for specific tasks

Page 34 highlights

USING ADOBE PREMIERE PRO 29 Workflows and setup • Use the superior selection and masking tools to divide a frame into elements for animation or compositing. Online resources for Premiere Pro and Photoshop workflow • Franklin McMahaon provides a video tutorial that demonstrates creating a title in Photoshop for use in Premiere Pro in this video tutorial from Layers Magazine. • This Premiere Pro tutorial video by Phil Hawkins at Infinite Skills shows how to import files between Photoshop and Premiere Pro. • Jarle Leirpoll shows how to automate production of lower thirds with Photoshop and Premiere Pro in this article on the ProVideo Coalition website. Comparative advantages for specific tasks The strengths of Premiere Pro lie in its numerous video editing features. You can use it to combine Photoshop files with video clips, audio clips, and other assets. You can use the Photoshop files, for example, as titles, graphics, and masks. In contrast, Photoshop has excellent tools for painting, drawing, and selecting portions of an image. The Photoshop Quick Selection tool and Magnetic Lasso tool make it easy to create a mask from a complex shape. Rather than handdrawing a mask in Premiere Pro, consider doing this work in Photoshop. Similarly, if you are applying several paint strokes by hand to get rid of dust, consider using the Photoshop paint tools. The animation and video features in Photoshop Extended include simple keyframe-based animation. Premiere Pro, however, provides quite a bit more keyframe control over various properties. Exchanging still images Premiere Pro can import and export still images in many formats. For greatest versatility, however, use the native Photoshop PSD format when transferring individual frames or still image sequences from Photoshop to Premiere Pro. When you import a PSD file into Premiere Pro, you can choose whether to import it as a flattened image, or with its layers separate and intact. It is often a good idea to prepare a still image in Photoshop before importing it into Premiere Pro. Examples of such preparation include correcting color, scaling, and cropping. It is often better to change a source image in Photoshop than to have Premiere Pro perform the same operation many times per second as it renders each frame for previews or final output. In Photoshop, you can create a PSD document that is set up correctly for a specific video output type. From the New File dialog box, select a Film & Video preset. In Premiere Pro, you can create a PSD document that matches your composition and sequence settings. Choose File > New > Photoshop File. Exchanging movies You can also exchange video files, such as QuickTime movies, between Photoshop and Premiere Pro. When you open a movie in Photoshop, a video layer is created that refers to the source footage file. Video layers allow you to paint nondestructively on the movie's frames. When you save a PSD file with a video layer, Photoshop saves the edits that you made to the video layer. Photoshop does not save edits made to the source footage itself. You can also render a movie directly from Photoshop. For example, you can create a QuickTime movie from Photoshop that can then be imported into Premiere Pro. Color Premiere Pro works internally with colors in an RGB (red, green, blue) color space. If you want to edit video clips you create in Photoshop in Premiere Pro, create the clips in RGB. Last updated 1/16/2012

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29
USING ADOBE PREMIERE PRO
Workflows and setup
Last updated 1/16/2012
Use the superior selection and masking tools to divide a frame into elements for animation or compositing.
Online resources for Premiere Pro and Photoshop workflow
Franklin McMahaon provides a video tutorial that demonstrates creating a title in Photoshop for use in Premiere
Pro
in this video tutorial from Layers Magazine
.
This Premiere Pro tutorial video by Phil Hawkins at Infinite Skills
shows how to import files between Photoshop
and Premiere Pro.
Jarle Leirpoll shows how to automate production of lower thirds with Photoshop and Premiere Pro
in this article
on the ProVideo Coalition website
.
Comparative advantages for specific tasks
The strengths of Premiere Pro lie in its numerous video editing features. You can use it to combine Photoshop files
with video clips, audio clips, and other assets. You can use the Photoshop files, for example, as titles, graphics, and
masks.
In contrast, Photoshop has excellent tools for painting, drawing, and selecting portions of an image. The Photoshop
Quick Selection tool and Magnetic Lasso tool make it easy to create a mask from a complex shape. Rather than hand-
drawing a mask in Premiere Pro, consider doing this work in Photoshop. Similarly, if you are applying several paint
strokes by hand to get rid of dust, consider using the Photoshop paint tools.
The animation and video features in Photoshop Extended include simple keyframe-based animation. Premiere Pro,
however, provides quite a bit more keyframe control over various properties.
Exchanging still images
Premiere Pro can import and export still images in many formats. For greatest versatility, however, use the native
Photoshop PSD format when transferring individual frames or still image sequences from Photoshop to Premiere Pro.
When you import a PSD file into Premiere Pro, you can choose whether to import it as a flattened image, or with its
layers separate and intact.
It is often a good idea to prepare a still image in Photoshop before importing it into Premiere Pro. Examples of such
preparation include correcting color, scaling, and cropping. It is often better to change a source image in Photoshop
than to have Premiere Pro perform the same operation many times per second as it renders each frame for previews
or final output.
In Photoshop, you can create a PSD document that is set up correctly for a specific video output type. From the New
File dialog box, select a Film & Video preset. In Premiere Pro, you can create a PSD document that matches your
composition and sequence settings. Choose File > New > Photoshop File.
Exchanging movies
You can also exchange video files, such as QuickTime movies, between Photoshop and Premiere Pro. When you open
a movie in Photoshop, a video layer is created that refers to the source footage file. Video layers allow you to paint
nondestructively on the movie’s frames. When you save a PSD file with a video layer, Photoshop saves the edits that
you made to the video layer. Photoshop does not save edits made to the source footage itself.
You can also render a movie directly from Photoshop. For example, you can create a QuickTime movie from
Photoshop that can then be imported into Premiere Pro.
Color
Premiere Pro works internally with colors in an RGB (red, green, blue) color space. If you want to edit video clips you
create in Photoshop in Premiere Pro, create the clips in RGB.