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Editing Tools

Lesson 11 from: Adobe Premiere Pro Fundamentals

Philip Ebiner

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Lesson Info

11. Editing Tools

Lessons

Class Trailer

Chapter 1: Introduction

1

Class Introduction

01:41
2

Starting a New Project and Premiere Pro Orientation

12:33
3

Importing and Organizing

07:24
4

Quick Win - Stablize Your Videos

02:40
5

CC 2020 Updates

02:31
6

Quiz: Chapter 1: Introduction

Chapter 2: Editing Your Video

7

Starting a New Sequence and Understanding the Timeline

05:55
8

Adding Clips to the Timeline, Syncing Footage, and Making Selects

12:17
9

Exercise Syncing Video and Audio

01:03
10

Exercise Review Syncing Video and Audio

03:09
11

Editing Tools

16:14
12

Adding bRoll Footage to Your Video

10:42
13

Adjusting Clip Size and Position

04:01
14

REVIEW Adjusting Clip Size and Position

01:49
15

Bonus - Editing Down an Interview

34:47
16

Editing a Narrative Scene

10:07
17

Update CC 2018 - Opening Multiple Projects in Premiere Pro CC 2018

03:49
18

Update CC 2018 - Close Gaps in Premiere Pro CC 2018

01:36
19

CC 2020 Update - Auto Reframe

05:42
20

Quiz: Chapter 2: Editing Your Video

Chapter 3: Adding Video and Audio Transitions

21

Class Check In

00:51
22

Adding Video Transitions and EXERCISE

08:25
23

Exercise Review Video Transitions

02:27
24

Adding Audio Transitions

03:36
25

Exercise - Create a Custom Blur Transition

07:18
26

Trouble with Transitions

06:36
27

Quiz: Chapter 3: Adding Video and Audio Transitions

Chapter 4: Creating Titles (Adobe Premiere Pro CC 2017.1 and newer)

28

Update CC 2018 - New Titles in Premiere Pro CC 2017.1 - the Essential Graphics

07:51
29

Update CC 2018 - Animating Your Title Cards

05:44
30

Update CC 2018 - Saving Titles as Preset Graphics

02:16
31

Update CC 2018 - Essential Graphics Updates

10:27
32

CC 2020 Update - Underlining and Renaming Shape Layers

01:56
33

Quiz: Chapter 4: Creating Titles (Adobe Premiere Pro CC 2017.1 and newer)

Chapter 5: Editing Audio

34

Adjusting Audio Levels in Premiere Pro

10:16
35

Adjusting Audio Channels

05:05
36

Update CC 2017 - Editing Audio with the Essential Sound Panel

07:57
37

Fixing Audio with the Low and High Pass Filters

04:17
38

Improving Audio with EQ (Equalization)

39

Adjusting Audio Tracks with Effects

02:14
40

Exercise - Fixing Bad Audio

00:41
41

Exercise Review - Remove Bad Background Noise

04:32
42

Adding Music to Your Project and Making a Song Shorter

11:24
43

Easily Removing Background Noise with Audacity

05:17
44

Update CC 2019 - Reduce Reverb and Reduce Noise Sliders

02:47
45

Parametric EQ Tutorial in Premiere Pro

04:42
46

Remove Echo in Premiere Pro with Parametric Equalizer

05:28
47

Quiz: Chapter 5: Editing Audio

Chapter 6: Color Correction and Grading

48

Color Correction with Lumetri Basics

08:43
49

Exercise - Fix White Balance UPDATE

00:38
50

Exercise Review - Fix White Balance UPDATE

02:30
51

Creative Tab - Lumetri Color

05:30
52

Curves Tab - Lumetri Color

03:50
53

Color Wheels - Lumetri Color

01:51
54

HSL Secondary - Lumetri Color

03:40
55

Vignette - Lumetri Color

02:49
56

Exercise - Matching Exposure

00:55
57

Exercise Review - Matching Exposure

04:43
58

Color Correction with Adjustment Layers

06:08
59

Update CC 2018 - Adding Multiple Lumetri Color Effects

03:42
60

Update CC 2019 - Selective Color Grading

02:30
61

Applying Color Effects to Specific Parts of Video with Mask Tracking

04:16
62

Quiz: Chapter 6: Color Correction and Grading

Chapter 7: Motion in Premiere Pre

63

Adding Motion to Title Graphics

04:37
64

Add the Ken Burns Effect to Photos

02:22
65

Exercise - Add Motion to Video to Make it More Dynamic

01:14
66

Exercise Review - Add Motion to Video to Make it More Dynamic

06:14
67

OPTIONAL Adding Motion to Screenshots

08:05
68

Quiz: Chapter 7: Motion in Premiere Pre

Chapter 8: Exporting Your Video

69

Exporting a High-Quality, Small File-Size Video

05:32
70

OPTIONAL - Export Settings - In Depth Review

12:02
71

Export a Full Resolution Video

01:28
72

Exporting Small File-Size Preview Video

01:45
73

Practice Exercise - Finish Class Project

01:03
74

Quiz: Chapter 8: Exporting Your Video

Chapter 9: Visual Effects and Advanced Premiere Pro Tips

75

Adding and Adjusting Effects to Your Video Clips

06:55
76

Adjusting Effects with Keyframes

04:42
77

Using Lumetri Color Presets

03:35
78

Stabilize Shaky Footage with Warp Stabilizer

05:21
79

Exercise - Stabilize Shaky Video

00:36
80

Exercise Review - Stabilize Shaky Video

02:46
81

Make Footage More Cinematic with Overlays

06:44
82

Capture Still Images from Video

01:41
83

EXERCISE - Remove Noise and Grain from Video Clip

02:55
84

Quiz: Chapter 9: Visual Effects and Advanced Premiere Pro Tips

Chapter 10: Video Speed in Premiere Pro

85

Adjusting Clip Speed

05:10
86

Time Remapping and Speed Ramps

03:54
87

CC 2020 Update - Time Remapping up to 20,000%

02:20
88

Slow Motion Video By Interpreting Frame Rates

01:56
89

Exercise - Speed Ramps

01:28
90

Exercise Review - Speed Ramps

00:57
91

Quiz: Chapter 10: Video Speed in Premiere Pro

Chapter 11: Green Screen Editing - Chromakeying in Premiere Pro

92

Green Screen Tutorial (ChromaKeying) in Premiere Pro

07:37
93

Adding a Background to Green Screen Video

05:45
94

Quiz: Chapter 11: Green Screen Editing - Chromakeying in Premiere Pro

Chapter 12: Conclusion

95

Conclusion

00:55

Final Quiz

96

Final Quiz

Lesson Info

Editing Tools

in this lesson. We're learning about all of our different editing tools over here so that we can edit our footage on our timelines in a very efficient way. That's the goal is to make you efficient editors just like a pro would be to learn how to do this. Let's start a new sequence. I'm going to take some of my B roll clips and add it to just a new sequence that we can work on. I'm going to take this cruising down street MP four and just drag it onto a new sequence. Sometimes that pops up, it seems like it's asking you to add a completely new sequence. Just press cancel and then it's already added this new sequence. So I'm just gonna call this B roll edits. Then I'm just going to take cruising down the street to drag it onto the end. Then let's just do working on the chair and maybe one more photo of Anthony and loni. So I just have all four of these clips back to back. The entire clips are on there. So let's go through our tools first is the selection tool and whenever you hover over a...

ny of these tools, you see the keyboard shortcut. V for selection. This is your most popular tool. It's what you're going to use to select and move around. Sometimes it's modifies to a different tool. For example when you hover over in between a panel, it changes so you can change the panel size when you hover on the side of a clip on your timeline, it changes to the trim edit tool. What that is. It allows you to select a clip and drag the endpoint in or the in point in or out. So now if we play through this, it gets cut off right there instead of going all the way to the end of the clip and cutting to that next shot. So just using the selection tool and the trim edit, you are able to edit these clips down and one thing you can see when I actually and making that edit when I have this selected and I dragged in or out, You can see up in the program monitor, you can see where I am about to edit in or out. So say I want to edit before he gets to that truck. See right here, maybe I want to edit the end right there. So now if I play through this, it goes and cuts right there before he rolls past that truck. There's different ways to get it to be at that point though. So let me just extend these sides. I'm going to skip over to this razor blade tool. Think of it as a razor where you can cut your clips up so I can just cut around and it cuts the clips into different pieces, we're going to undo that just pressing control command Z on my keyboard controls the if you're on a pc. If I want to cut specifically at this frame right before he gets to the truck, I can take my razor blade tool and just trim right there. So now we have an edit right at that spot. I can go back to my selection tool just pressing V. On my keyboard, select this second part where he's going behind that truck and delete it. Just by pressing delete on my keyboard on a Mac or backspace on a pc. Say I want to cut right there but then go directly into this clip right here which hasn't been color corrected to about this point. I can take my razor blade tool again trim right there, take my selection tool, select this first part. Delete it. Then I can select all of these clips or just the single clip and drag them over to the left to where they meet. You'll notice that a lot of the things I'm doing, it seems like there's like a magnetic touch. As soon as you get over to the left it snaps into place. That's because I have this magnet snap button selected and that's very useful especially when you're making edits. When you want to specifically make a cut where your timeline indicator is with the magnetic snap button on it will automatically help you edit to that point. It will help you move things specifically to that point. If I don't do it. If I don't have snap on, I have to eyeball it, I have to get it right there where they meet and that's a little bit harder than with the magnet medic snap tool on. So that's one way to move these clips all the way to the left. I'm gonna move them back and I'm gonna show you a different way. You can click in this area between the clips impressed. Delete on your keyboard. And that does a ripple delete. It's the same thing as going right click and choosing ripple. Delete it. Deletes the space in between and it moves everything on the right side to the left. You can do a lot of edits with just those tools just with the selection tool where you can choose the end of the clip or the beginning of the clip to drag in or out. And the razer blade tool. But premiere Pro comes with some other tools that are even more helpful. I'm just going to get this back to where we were where all the entirety of all these clips are. On our timeline. One tool I want to talk about is the ripple edit tool b on the keyboard. See what happens when I select that tool and I hover over the edge of a clip. When I'm not hovering over the edge of a clip, it doesn't look like it can do anything. It's not going to let me select anything. But if I hover over the clip, edge of the clip and I drag to the left, see what happens when I let go all of the clips on the right, automatically jump to the left so it automatically does that ripple delete of that space that was between where before we had to delete it ourselves. This is just a one step process. Same if we go to this next shot and we drag in to the point where we want, it's going to edit to that point and make all these clips jump over to the left. Let me show you what happens when if we were to do that same thing without the ripple edit tool. So I just undid that. Take my selection tool. Dragon. There's that space right there. But with the ripple edit tool, it automatically will jump all these clips to the right over to the left. So now we have this edit right here to here. Got it. And this clip is not color corrected. You might be thinking wow, why does that clip look so bad? We're going to learn how to color correct this footage in a future lesson. It's because we shot basically raw footage. That's what that lut that L. U. T. File is all about. We'll learn about that during color correction. So that's the ripple edit tool. A quick way to get to the ripple edit tool. Let me just zoom in a little bit further on my keyboard is when we are hovering over our timeline with our selection tool. Just press command on your keyboard or control If you're on a pc, see what happens now with command selected. My selection tool becomes the ripple edit tool, that yellow tool and when I select and drag in, it acts as the ripple edit tool. You'll notice when I have commands, I'm still present command. There's this other tool, This is the rolling edit tool. It looks, it's read, it has four arrows, what this does, it will move this cut point to the right or left and will edit the left or right sides. So see what happens when I click this with the rolling edit tool and drag to the left. This first clip become shorter and the second clip became longer. We could do that ourselves just with the selection tool by clicking with the trim edit tool and then clicking the second one and dragging it to meet it. But the same thing happens when we use the rolling edit tool, drag to the left or when we have our selection tools selected and we press command on our keyboard and we go in between. When we see the red rolling edit tool highlighted and drag, there are two more tools that I want to go over really quickly. The slip tool and the slide tool. Let me just make this clip a lot shorter. I'm just going to make this clip very short right here. I'm just going to delete that space in there. I can just take my slip tool. Why on my keyboard, click on this clip and then drag to the left. You can see that there's two videos popping up in the program monitor. The video on the left is where the video will start. The video clip on the right shows where that clip will end. So say we want to get him already rounding this current corner and end right there when he gets into the shadow of that tree, it's basically slipping this clip to the left, the timing of it. So it starts and ends earlier. Or we could slip back dragging to the right so it starts and ends later. I hope that kind of makes sense. I know it's a little bit confusing but I think playing with these tools yourself, you'll start to understand what's actually going on. The last one is this slide tool. Say I have three clips in a row. If I select this middle clip and drag to the right or drag to the left, see what happens. It moves this clip to the left, it adds the first clip shorter and it makes this third clip longer or back to the right, so it's taking that middle clip and editing the clips around it. The first and the third clips in this sequence. The tools that I mainly use are the selection tool with the modifiers of the rolling edit and the ripple edit. This will make you a very efficient video editor. I want to show you one more thing back on our main sequence. I'm going to delete these two B roll clips that we have just by selecting them and pressing delete on your keyboard. And same with this audio selecting it pressing delete or backspace. If you're on a pc, we have these two clips, interview a an interview B. If I take my say razer blade tool and I go through this and we're listening and we find a good spot that we want. I can either Make an edit to both clips by clicking one after the other and then say we play through this and we really like this soundbite that he's saying right now and then we stop and we wanted to take that selection again. Now we can with the selection tool, take this selection and move it around or take this first selection and delete it whatever we want. But that was a two step process. I'm just going to undo that. So say let's just open up this waveform again. I'm gonna zoom in here on my keyboard. Say we want, starting here to hear for both clips. We can take the razer blade tool again while we have a hovering over time line. Press shift on your keyboard which makes it a razor blade tool that cuts everything on the timeline at this point with the regular razor blade tool. It just cuts that track that you click on with the shift double razor tool. It cuts everything on the timeline. So it's just a faster way to cut everything because you might have not only audio, you might have b roll, you might have all sorts of other things and you want to just trim everything at once. Another way to do this. There's always another way. So I hope you're sticking with me because this is really important for this audio track. What we're going to do is we're actually just going to delete the B camera audio. So to select just the B camera audio versus the video, you have to option click the audio. Also click if you're on a pc, See if you just click one or the other. It selects both the audio and the video. So if you press delete it will delete both the audio and the video. But if we just want to get rid of this audio a what we can do is press option click and it just selects the audio track whatever clip we select and then delete it. Or we might not want to actually delete this audio track because we might want to save it just in case the audio from camera a gets messed up or something like that. It's just back up. We never really want to delete it. We can just right click and you'll see again what I did. I actually just right clicked and it selected both the audio and video. What I'm going to have to do is option right click and then check enable what enable does is similar to what this toggle track on and off button does but instead of turning on and off an entire track it turns off just a single clip. So now the audio from camera B is off if we play through this but it's still there in case we need to enable it later on, it's time to play a little bit around with this. Edit. What I want you to do before we start. The next part of the project is go through this interview and find the part that you want to save for your video. So this interview clip is seven minutes long or so. The final project for this course is to have a one minute long video and I know a minute might or might not sound long to you. A minute video for a lot of people is long nowadays but when you have an interview like this it is hard to kind of pick and choose the points that you want to edit. So go through the interview using the editing tools, make your selections and cut it down to just one minute. So by the next lesson you and I will have a sequence that just has one minute worth of video with both interview camera A and B. Interview audio A on an interview audio B off and it's just going to look like a sequence like this but it's going to have a bunch of edits and it's going to be a minute long now in the next lesson I'm going to jump ahead to adding B roll and making a good sequence. But at the very end of this course I'm going to put together a bunch of the longer lessons including one where I walked through my entire editing process for finding the right audio clips for this interview. This is seven minutes long Anthony talks about a lot of different things and it's interesting to see perhaps what you are going to create. What I want to create. What I think is important, what you think is important or maybe it's not the most important thing, but just what you think would be interesting for a minute long piece. So if you want to see me edit this entire interview clip down to one minute, there will be a lesson later on in the course. I just am explaining that I don't want to put it in the very next lesson because some people might want to just do it themselves and jumped onto the next lesson where we'll learn a little bit more. So anyways, I've talked about this long enough, enjoy that lesson if you want and we'll see you in the next lesson when we start adding more B roll to our footage

Class Materials

Bonus Materials with Purchase

Interview Clips for Windows Users
Exericise Resources
Resources for Premiere Pro Course

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