Exercise Review - Add Motion to Video to Make it More Dynamic
Philip Ebiner
Lesson Info
66. Exercise Review - Add Motion to Video to Make it More Dynamic
Lessons
Class Introduction
01:41 2Starting a New Project and Premiere Pro Orientation
12:33 3Importing and Organizing
07:24 4Quick Win - Stablize Your Videos
02:40 5CC 2020 Updates
02:31 6Quiz: Chapter 1: Introduction
Starting a New Sequence and Understanding the Timeline
05:55 8Adding Clips to the Timeline, Syncing Footage, and Making Selects
12:17 9Exercise Syncing Video and Audio
01:03 10Exercise Review Syncing Video and Audio
03:09 11Editing Tools
16:14 12Adding bRoll Footage to Your Video
10:42 13Adjusting Clip Size and Position
04:01 14REVIEW Adjusting Clip Size and Position
01:49 15Bonus - Editing Down an Interview
34:47 16Editing a Narrative Scene
10:07 17Update CC 2018 - Opening Multiple Projects in Premiere Pro CC 2018
03:49 18Update CC 2018 - Close Gaps in Premiere Pro CC 2018
01:36 19CC 2020 Update - Auto Reframe
05:42 20Quiz: Chapter 2: Editing Your Video
21Class Check In
00:51 22Adding Video Transitions and EXERCISE
08:25 23Exercise Review Video Transitions
02:27 24Adding Audio Transitions
03:36 25Exercise - Create a Custom Blur Transition
07:18 26Trouble with Transitions
06:36 27Quiz: Chapter 3: Adding Video and Audio Transitions
28Update CC 2018 - New Titles in Premiere Pro CC 2017.1 - the Essential Graphics
07:51 29Update CC 2018 - Animating Your Title Cards
05:44 30Update CC 2018 - Saving Titles as Preset Graphics
02:16 31Update CC 2018 - Essential Graphics Updates
10:27 32CC 2020 Update - Underlining and Renaming Shape Layers
01:56 33Quiz: Chapter 4: Creating Titles (Adobe Premiere Pro CC 2017.1 and newer)
34Adjusting Audio Levels in Premiere Pro
10:16 35Adjusting Audio Channels
05:05 36Update CC 2017 - Editing Audio with the Essential Sound Panel
07:57 37Fixing Audio with the Low and High Pass Filters
04:17 38Improving Audio with EQ (Equalization)
39Adjusting Audio Tracks with Effects
02:14 40Exercise - Fixing Bad Audio
00:41 41Exercise Review - Remove Bad Background Noise
04:32 42Adding Music to Your Project and Making a Song Shorter
11:24 43Easily Removing Background Noise with Audacity
05:17 44Update CC 2019 - Reduce Reverb and Reduce Noise Sliders
02:47 45Parametric EQ Tutorial in Premiere Pro
04:42 46Remove Echo in Premiere Pro with Parametric Equalizer
05:28 47Quiz: Chapter 5: Editing Audio
48Color Correction with Lumetri Basics
08:43 49Exercise - Fix White Balance UPDATE
00:38 50Exercise Review - Fix White Balance UPDATE
02:30 51Creative Tab - Lumetri Color
05:30 52Curves Tab - Lumetri Color
03:50 53Color Wheels - Lumetri Color
01:51 54HSL Secondary - Lumetri Color
03:40 55Vignette - Lumetri Color
02:49 56Exercise - Matching Exposure
00:55 57Exercise Review - Matching Exposure
04:43 58Color Correction with Adjustment Layers
06:08 59Update CC 2018 - Adding Multiple Lumetri Color Effects
03:42 60Update CC 2019 - Selective Color Grading
02:30 61Applying Color Effects to Specific Parts of Video with Mask Tracking
04:16 62Quiz: Chapter 6: Color Correction and Grading
63Adding Motion to Title Graphics
04:37 64Add the Ken Burns Effect to Photos
02:22 65Exercise - Add Motion to Video to Make it More Dynamic
01:14 66Exercise Review - Add Motion to Video to Make it More Dynamic
06:14 67OPTIONAL Adding Motion to Screenshots
08:05 68Quiz: Chapter 7: Motion in Premiere Pre
69Exporting a High-Quality, Small File-Size Video
05:32 70OPTIONAL - Export Settings - In Depth Review
12:02 71Export a Full Resolution Video
01:28 72Exporting Small File-Size Preview Video
01:45 73Practice Exercise - Finish Class Project
01:03 74Quiz: Chapter 8: Exporting Your Video
75Adding and Adjusting Effects to Your Video Clips
06:55 76Adjusting Effects with Keyframes
04:42 77Using Lumetri Color Presets
03:35 78Stabilize Shaky Footage with Warp Stabilizer
05:21 79Exercise - Stabilize Shaky Video
00:36 80Exercise Review - Stabilize Shaky Video
02:46 81Make Footage More Cinematic with Overlays
06:44 82Capture Still Images from Video
01:41 83EXERCISE - Remove Noise and Grain from Video Clip
02:55 84Quiz: Chapter 9: Visual Effects and Advanced Premiere Pro Tips
85Adjusting Clip Speed
05:10 86Time Remapping and Speed Ramps
03:54 87CC 2020 Update - Time Remapping up to 20,000%
02:20 88Slow Motion Video By Interpreting Frame Rates
01:56 89Exercise - Speed Ramps
01:28 90Exercise Review - Speed Ramps
00:57 91Quiz: Chapter 10: Video Speed in Premiere Pro
92Green Screen Tutorial (ChromaKeying) in Premiere Pro
07:37 93Adding a Background to Green Screen Video
05:45 94Quiz: Chapter 11: Green Screen Editing - Chromakeying in Premiere Pro
95Conclusion
00:55 96Final Quiz
Lesson Info
Exercise Review - Add Motion to Video to Make it More Dynamic
how did you do? Hopefully you were able to add some cool motion. I have this sequence that I created for the preview of this lesson, showing you some different motion of this clip. To start out. What we need to do is take this 4K interview clip and drag it into a new sequence, you might be saying wait, what, what are you doing? This is a four K sequence. We need to be able to zoom in on this clip and if we do we're going to lose quality. That is true. So we have to change the sequence settings for this clip first and maybe this is something you forgot to do, Go up to sequence sequence settings and then under editing mode, change it to customs so that we can change the frame size to 1920 by 80. This is still HD and then say, okay, just say okay, it's going to say that the clip that we added, it's too big for this, this sequence or it's not the right settings, that's totally fine. And you can see now that I said okay, our sequence is actually smaller than the footage. This is great beca...
use now I can take this clip, go to the motion and zoom out or move it around so that's what I'm going to do. There's two types of motion. I want you to consider adding to your clips to make them more dynamic. One is a zoom and one is just sort of a pan across and like I mentioned in the last little preview lesson, this is something you can do while you're filming. If you have a dolly or a slider or even a camera with a tripod, you can move around the frame, but when you are shooting an interview and you don't want to mess up the shot, it's hard to do that if you only have one camera. So shooting with two cameras is an option. You can have one camera moving around and the other just stable or shooting with one camera in a higher resolution is if that's possible shooting in four K. Or two K to get some footage where you can punch in and move around later on. So with this clip I'm just going to zoom in, start the frame around 57 and I can put my timeline indicator really anywhere and just set a key frame for scale and position. And then I'm going to drag those key frames all the way to the left and then I'm going to zoom in even more and drag down and to the right, just a little bit. So moving to the right and move these key frames to the very end. Now I want to play through this to make sure that it looks good and it's not too fast because you might have motion that's a little bit too fast and I actually think this is a little bit too fast. So I'm just going to move these key frames back And change it to maybe 68 And move it just back to the right and back up just a little bit and move these key frames to the right again. Now the percentage change from 57 to 68 is less than 57-72, meaning this motion is slower and more subtle. You can still notice this motion and maybe this is a little bit too much. But I actually kind of like it. So now I'm going to show you how to add the pants so I'm going to take this video clip again, drag it onto this sequence, you can see it's already punched in And I don't want to go any more than 100 on scale. That will mean a decrease decrease in quality when I export it. So if I go up to 110%, that's basically digitally zooming in on this footage past the point of its full quality. So I'll just set at 75 and I can make it move either way, but I think going from left to right might look good. So I'm going to move Anthony over to the right, a bit, set a key frame for position, drag that to the beginning and then just drag to the right just a bit and drag this key frame all the way to the right. So now if I play through this pretty darn good, pretty subtle. But I like that. Now I want to show you something this is a cool trick actually. So say I added that position animation. But I think uh oh actually I think his head is a little bit too close to the top. I want a little bit more headroom. Well I can't just go in here and drag him down like this because that's setting a new key frame for position and it's actually making the motion of the video clip go to the left and then down and then continue what I can do. I'm just going to delete that. What I can do is change the anchor point. The anger point is what I call the saving grace of affecting or fixing position. If I have key frames, I can actually take the anchor point and move this clip around. Now the anchor point, if you're familiar with Photoshop or adobe after effects might make a little bit more sense. It's basically where this clip is anchored to originally, it's anchored in the middle. But by moving this anchor point setting around, I can move the anchor point basically elsewhere. That's really all you need to know. But what this can do now is I can move it up or down and it actually keeps the motion of the previous animation. But this whole clip is nudged down now. So I have a little bit more headroom or say I want to move it up even more just to show you what happens. It moves the whole clip up but keeps the motion the left to right motion that we added before. So that's just a quick tip if you get stuck so that you don't have to actually go back and change both of these key frames for the position. Because sometimes that happens where you make a bunch of key frames and you do go back and change all of these while you can actually just use the anchor point to do that. So that's how you add motion to a video clip to make it a little bit more dynamic, especially for shorter promotional trailer type pieces. It's kind of a cool way to make your video look even better. Thanks for watching and we'll see you in another lesson.
Class Materials
Ratings and Reviews
Haedyn Sutton
Student Work
Related Classes
Adobe Premiere Pro