But I have a question I desperately need to be answered about this program. How on earth do you open a second time line?! I looked for hours in my program and STILL cannot figure it out!! I feel like a dummy. Please reply, I really need this question answered T~T thanks..
Its easy... from the menu just choose File/New Sequence... it will ask you to give the sequence a name, and then when you click "OK" the new timeline will open up in your timeline panel. Any other timelines you had opened will be tabbed... just click on the tab in the timeline panel to bring a sequence to the front where you can work on it.
Thank you for the tutorial. Did you happen to run across a problem when using photographs of such high resolution? I remember reading somewhere that Premiere Pro doesn't handle such high resolutions all that well and that still should be reduced to around 800 by 600.
Hi Steve... the only real problem I've run into with high resolution images is just preview/render times being increased... big photos can make the computer grunt a little as it struggles to do some heavy lifting. However, with my system a 8 gigs
RAM, photos of 2000px were no problem. Reducing the size to 800 by 600 would really limit the amount of pan & scan you could do. Problems people experience using higher resolution images are probably due to the computer hardward, not Premiere.
Finally, very nice tutorial! Thnx Steve! Keep them coming!
flamurkadriu 9 months ago
ohh man! your awesome at this!
But I have a question I desperately need to be answered about this program. How on earth do you open a second time line?! I looked for hours in my program and STILL cannot figure it out!! I feel like a dummy. Please reply, I really need this question answered T~T thanks..
TackyAnimationsX3 2 years ago
Its easy... from the menu just choose File/New Sequence... it will ask you to give the sequence a name, and then when you click "OK" the new timeline will open up in your timeline panel. Any other timelines you had opened will be tabbed... just click on the tab in the timeline panel to bring a sequence to the front where you can work on it.
Video101TV 2 years ago
Whoa thanks for the video, you going to make anymore?
Emoga25 2 years ago
I have a DVD with 22 tutorials on it.. see the above posted video response.
Video101TV 2 years ago
Greetings:
Thank you for the tutorial. Did you happen to run across a problem when using photographs of such high resolution? I remember reading somewhere that Premiere Pro doesn't handle such high resolutions all that well and that still should be reduced to around 800 by 600.
Just curious. Thank you.
Steve
manjunk64 2 years ago
Hi Steve... the only real problem I've run into with high resolution images is just preview/render times being increased... big photos can make the computer grunt a little as it struggles to do some heavy lifting. However, with my system a 8 gigs
RAM, photos of 2000px were no problem. Reducing the size to 800 by 600 would really limit the amount of pan & scan you could do. Problems people experience using higher resolution images are probably due to the computer hardward, not Premiere.
Video101TV 2 years ago
thanks for the tutorial! it helps a lot
kuanh 3 years ago