Adobe 25520388 User Guide - Page 33

Cross-application workflows, Edit a clip in its original application

Page 33 highlights

USING ADOBE PREMIERE PRO 28 Workflows and setup Preview files Preview files made on one platform are not available on the other. When a project is opened on a different platform, Premiere Pro rerenders the preview files. When that project is then opened on its original platform, Premiere Pro renders the preview files yet again. High-bit-depth files Windows AVI files containing either 10-bit 4:2:2 uncompressed video (v210), or 8-bit 4:2:2 uncompressed video (UYVU) are not supported on Mac OS. Preview rendering The playback quality of unrendered non-native files is not as high as playback quality of these files on their native platforms. For example, AVI files do not play back as well on Mac OS as they do on Windows. Premiere Pro renders preview files for non-native files on the current platform. Premiere Pro always renders preview files in a native format. A red bar in the timeline indicates which sections contain files needing rendering. Cross-application workflows You can use various other Adobe applications to enhance or modify the assets used in a Premiere Pro project. Also, you can use Premiere Pro to edit projects begun in other applications. Edit a clip in its original application In Premiere Pro, the Edit Original command opens clips in the applications associated with their file types. You can edit clips in the associated applications. Premiere Pro automatically incorporates the changes into the current project without replacing files. Similarly, Premiere Pro sequences placed in other applications, such as Adobe After Effects can be opened with the host product's Edit Original command. 1 Select a clip in either the Project panel or Timeline panel. 2 Choose Edit > Edit Original. You can export a movie from Premiere Pro with the data necessary for the Edit Original command. In the Export Movie Settings dialog box, choose Project from the Embedding options menu. Working with Photoshop and Premiere Pro If you use Photoshop to create still images, you can use Premiere Pro to make them move and change. You can animate an entire image or any of its layers. You can edit individual frames of video and image sequence files in Photoshop. In addition to using any Photoshop tool to edit and paint on video, you can also apply filters, masks, transformations, layers styles, and blending modes. You can paint using the Clone Stamp, Pattern Stamp, Healing Brush, or Spot Healing Brush. You can also edit video frames using the Patch tool. In Photoshop, with the Clone Stamp, you can sample a frame from a video layer and paint with the sampled source onto another video frame. As you move to different target frames, the source frame changes relative to the frame from which you initially sampled. After making edits, you can save the video as a PSD file, or you can render it as a QuickTime movie or image sequence. You can import any of these back into Premiere Pro for further editing. If you use Premiere Pro to create movies, you can use Photoshop to refine the individual frames of those movies. In Photoshop, you can do any of the following: • Remove unwanted visual elements. • Draw on individual frames. Last updated 1/16/2012

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28
USING ADOBE PREMIERE PRO
Workflows and setup
Last updated 1/16/2012
Preview files
Preview files made on one platform are not available on the other. When a project is opened on a
different platform, Premiere Pro rerenders the preview files. When that project is then opened on its original platform,
Premiere Pro renders the preview files yet again.
High-bit-depth files
Windows AVI files containing either 10-bit 4:2:2 uncompressed video (v210), or 8-bit 4:2:2
uncompressed video (UYVU) are not supported on Mac OS.
Preview rendering
The playback quality of unrendered non-native files is not as high as playback quality of these files
on their native platforms. For example, AVI files do not play back as well on Mac OS as they do on Windows. Premiere
Pro renders preview files for non-native files on the current platform. Premiere Pro always renders preview files in a
native format. A red bar in the timeline indicates which sections contain files needing rendering.
Cross-application workflows
You can use various other Adobe applications to enhance or modify the assets used in a Premiere Pro project. Also,
you can use Premiere Pro to edit projects begun in other applications.
Edit a clip in its original application
In Premiere Pro, the Edit Original command opens clips in the applications associated with their file types. You can
edit clips in the associated applications. Premiere Pro automatically incorporates the changes into the current project
without replacing files. Similarly, Premiere Pro sequences placed in other applications, such as Adobe After Effects can
be opened with the host product’s Edit Original command.
1
Select a clip in either the Project panel or Timeline panel.
2
Choose Edit > Edit Original.
You can export a movie from Premiere Pro with the data necessary for the Edit Original command. In the Export
Movie Settings dialog box, choose Project from the Embedding options menu.
Working with Photoshop and Premiere Pro
If you use Photoshop to create still images, you can use Premiere Pro to make them move and change. You can animate
an entire image or any of its layers.
You can edit individual frames of video and image sequence files in Photoshop. In addition to using any Photoshop
tool to edit and paint on video, you can also apply filters, masks, transformations, layers styles, and blending modes.
You can paint using the Clone Stamp, Pattern Stamp, Healing Brush, or Spot Healing Brush. You can also edit video
frames using the Patch tool.
In Photoshop, with the Clone Stamp, you can sample a frame from a video layer and paint with the sampled source
onto another video frame. As you move to different target frames, the source frame changes relative to the frame from
which you initially sampled.
After making edits, you can save the video as a PSD file, or you can render it as a QuickTime movie or image sequence.
You can import any of these back into Premiere Pro for further editing.
If you use Premiere Pro to create movies, you can use Photoshop to refine the individual frames of those movies. In
Photoshop, you can do any of the following:
Remove unwanted visual elements.
Draw on individual frames.