|
You have selected free tutorial of the AutoDesk for the Adobe Certified Associate (ACA) :
Adobe Certified Associate in Video Communication Using Premiere Pro CS 6/CC
Topics : Identifying Design Elements When Preparing Video : Demonstrate knowledge of the production planning and management process.
Adobe Help:-
The Timeline panel is the place where you build your all-important sequences. you'll use for your creative work. The Timeline is where you add clips to your sequences, make editorial changes to them, add visual and audio special effects, mix soundtracks, and add titles and graphics. In the Timeline panel you fine-tune the trimming of each clip until the sequence has the right order, pacing, flow, and duration. Another way to look at trimming is that it’s an adjustment to the In or Out point of clips in the timeline.
You are getting the following from timeline to to add /edit/modify the video clips:-
- view and edit sequences in the Timeline.
- Program Monitor shows you the contents of the currently displayed sequence at the position of the playhead.
- open multiple sequences at the same time, and each will be displayed in its own Timeline.
- The terms sequence and Timeline are often used interchangeably, as in "in the sequence" or "on the Timeline."
- managing the video tracks. Upper video tracks play "in front" of lower ones, so you would normally place graphics clips on tracks above background video clips.
- managing the audio tracks that all play at the same time to create an audio mix. Audio tracks can be mono (1 channel), stereo (2 channels), 5.1 (6 channels), or adaptive—with up to 32 channels.
- You can zoom in and out of the Timeline using the = and – keys (usually at the top of your keyboard) to get a better view of your clips. If you have a \ key, this will toggle the zoom level between your current setting and showing your whole sequence. You can also double-click the navigator at the bottom of the Timeline to view the whole timeline.
- change the height of Timeline tracks to gain access to additional controls and thumbnails on your video clips.
- Each track has a set of controls, shown on a track header on the far left, that change the way it functions.
- Time always moves from left to right on the Timeline, so when you play a sequence, the playhead will move in that direction.
- For most operations on the Timeline, you will use the standard Selection tool. However, there are several other tools that serve different purposes, and each tool has a keyboard shortcut. If in doubt, press the V key. This is the keyboard shortcut for the Selection tool.
- • For most operations on the Timeline, you will use the standard Selection tool. However, there are several other tools that serve different purposes, and each tool has a keyboard shortcut. If in doubt, press the V key. This is the keyboard shortcut for the Selection tool.
- You can zoom in and out of the Timeline using the = and – keys (usually at the top of your keyboard) to get a better view of your clips. If you have a \ key, this will toggle the zoom level between your current setting and showing your whole sequence. You can also double-click the navigator at the bottom of the Timeline to view the whole timeline.
Trimming of Video clips on timeline
trimming is nondestructive. In and Out points are merely markers that affect when playback of a clip starts and stops; they don’t delete frames from the original clip. If you make a clip shorter by setting a later In point, you can subsequently restore the lost frames by setting an earlier In point for that clip. and you required to know the tool panel
editing technique:
- To split one clip into two, click inside the clip with the Razor tool .
- To trim the end of one clip without altering the rest of the sequence in anyway, use the Selection tool to drag the end of a clip. This may leave a gap between clips.
- To shift a clip in time by automatically adjusting the Out point of the previous clip and the In point of the next clip, drag the clip with the Slide tool. The duration of the clip you dragged doesn’t change, but the durations of the adjacent clips do change.
- To trim the end of one clip without leaving a gap by automatically shifting all following clips in time, use the Ripple Edit tool to drag the end of a clip
- To move one or more clips to a different time while automatically shifting clips that the moved clips would otherwise overwrite, select clips with the Selection tool and Ctrl-drag (Windows) or Command-drag (Mac OS) them. This performs a ripple move.
- You can remove a clip from the timeline by pressing the Delete key, but you might prefer to perform a Ripple Delete by pressing Shift+Delete (Windows) or Shift+Forward Delete (Mac OS) so that the following clips shift to fill the gap.
- To adjust an edit so that one clip becomes shorter and the adjacent clip becomes longer, use the Rolling Edit tool .
- To change the frame rate (and therefore the speed) of a clip by dragging, use the Rate Stretch tool .
- To shift a clip in time without affecting adjacent clips, drag the clip with the Slip tool . This changes the In point and the Out point of the clip you drag. The duration of the clip and the adjacent clips don’t change, but you shift the "window" of time seen in the clip you dragged.
- To move one or more clips to a different time, select them with the Selection tooland drag them.
- To quickly select multiple clips on all tracks after a certain time, click the Track Select Forward tool in the timeline at the time where you want selection to start. The Track Select Backward tool does the same thing with tracks before the time at which you click the tool.
|
Your Salary Above $ 66000... Click ...
Ohh! You want More.... be game developer of your choice $ 102000 ....
|