 Hello again everyone and welcome to the Premiere Pro video tutorial. This is part 2.1 Editing Extended. So this is sort of further editing tips and tricks So this video will take you into some more advanced editing features and Yeah, so in the rest of the Premiere Pro series We've got titles effects sound and finishing so for now, let's just get going with Premiere Pro video tutorial part 2.1 editing extended Okay right So in this session We'll be using match frame Track select forwards and back Ripple and roll Trim edit tool And I'll be showing you some hidden menus and then finally window layouts So okay, let's get going So match frame Match frame is very simple to use as you can see You access it by the sequence menu And scroll down to match frame or just click the F key now to show you exactly what it does now so If I am Editing watching my my edits my sequence and I'm working on a clip and I need to Whatever reason I need to access this clip again from my project browser and I can see it in my timeline but Because I might have added it to the timeline a long time ago. I Don't necessarily know where it is in my project browser now. So If I want to go back to the source clip basically And Simplest and easiest ways by using match frame. So wherever I place my Playhead Along the clip any clip and then I press F It will bring up That exact frame so the exact frame that I'm looking at in my program window Is going to be brought up in the source window, but not only the exact frame so In my sort of mini timeline in the source window I've got my play head here and that play head is sitting on the exact same frame as the play head over here The in and out points are still showing So the the in and out points for that for that clip are still showing but also I've got the rest of the entire clip Available to me as well now So if there was something that I wanted to check From the rest of the clip, you know if I was kind of thinking well I kind of like that bit, but is it the best bit to be using I better have a look at the rest of it I can I can do that and bring it up by using match frame You can also do a clever little trick for example if Let me just unlink this selection so I can select the audio separately and I'm going to delete the audio from this clip So if for example, I accidentally delete the audio from from this clip or any clip Right what I'm going to do now is I'm going to Scroll to the very front of that clip and if you remember if I scrub through and press shift It will snap into position So now I'm on the first frame of that clip and I'm going to press F and That has match framed my clip and he's brought it up here in the source window So now I've got my original source clip, but I've still got the in and out points here So and Because this is the source clip. It's it's got this source audio with it as well So now all I can do all I need to do is click overwrite and This new source clip will overwrite the old one But it will overwrite it with the audio in place as well. So let's see what happens. I'll click overwrite bum there you go, so That's Added my clip But added it with the audio back in there as well So that's a good trick in case you lose your audio, but match frame is very very useful Useful thing to know you once you get using it You'll find you kind of use it more often than you think you then you thought you would Okay So that's match frame So track select forward and back Let's go in to have a look at what track select forward and back does So let's have a look Say I want to What do I want to do I don't know what I want to do but I want I want to do is I want to move My edit or Or or half of my edit for example this Perhaps I've got A whole load of clips from another sequence that I want to paste in position here But what I need to do first is move these clips out of the way to create a space so I can add them in So you can see what I did then which was sort of lasso Them All of those clips and then I can just grab them and move them all at the same time That's quite easy as we are right now But if you imagine you're working on a really big project It's got you know hundreds of video clips thousands of audio clips um And you're not going to be able to lasso all of them And be a hundred percent certain that you Caught them all because remember if you miss any and you move stuff then Everything can go out of sync and you can create a horrible mess Especially if you've got a really big project and things start going out of sync you're going to get into in a real trouble um, so In order to be able to select A whole load of clips Say I want to select everything in an edit from one point on Then I can use track select forward And that's this little thing here in the in the toolbar So I can just select that one And if I come down to my timeline wherever I click In this sequence we'll select everything From that point onwards Okay And then you can just move them as well easily when you do that So track select forwards track select backwards Um surprise surprise Does the exact opposite so that will select everything In the other direction Okay Very very useful If you're you working on big projects and you need to select a large amount of clips So I'm going to go back now to my pointer tool, which is keyboard shortcut V So next we'll look at ripple and roll So let's go and have a look at what those tools do in Premiere. Um, okay So, um, I'm going to click link selection and make sure that my clips are all linked And I'm going to go over here to where the ripple And roll tools are you know, you may have noticed before when I clicked on the track select button um When you you can you can select these Icons and you can also click and hold them and you'll get an extended menu down there. So the ripple edit tool Um, so let me just zoom in a little bit here to show you what happens So if I drag a clip using the ripple tool What it will do is it will shorten that clip That i'm dragging But it won't create a gap Like it normally would so if if let's just go back to my pointer tool if I I can I can do this shortening clips with the pointer tool, but if I do that It creates a gap in the edit um And I might be wanting to shorten my clip But obviously I don't really want to have a big black space in the middle of my edit So what I'll do is I'll select my ripple edit tool And I'll close that down But also the rest of my edit will Um, we'll close that gap Um, what it does do is is it will obviously change the the overall length of your edit or make it shorter Um, so you need to look out for that Uh, but I can also extend that back out and the same thing happens. It'll just push my edit out of the way I can also do the same from the front of the clip So I can shorten the front of the clip And what will happen then is when I close when I let go of this It just takes everything and pulls it all back into position Um, so it just it's just shortening the front of my clip So this kind of um, it requires you got a bit of knowledge as to what's going on in the edit here So ripple roll and the trim tool later on they they sort of Required that you understand That um in in in any edit point you have what's called um an outgoing clip And an incoming clip so the clip that's going out and the clip that's coming back in Um, and in between those you have an edit point obviously um, but What what you can't see is all of those Frames that are still there on each one of these clips so, um Obviously that that's not the full length of this clip. There are it's much longer than that But we've just we've just hidden those frames Out of view for now. We've not kind of deleted them for good We've just moved them out of the way for now and we can get them back at any time So that's the the main thing here is we can we can get these frames back at any time So if I click on the ripple tool like I said Extend this clip out Um, and I'll just add those frames that are just all there sitting waiting. Um, obviously If I extend so far I might come to the the very end of my source clip and that's as far as it can go obviously um, but You know, you can extend and shorten clips Using the ripple tool what ripple generally means in in you may come across ripple in in other areas Of editing and we will in fact later on when we do effects and things like that What it generally means is that it will move your clips in the timeline um Anything that does a ripple edit will will move clips in the timeline any other non ripple edit will leave the clips Where they are and and create a gap or something like that So that's what ripple does roll Rolls really useful actually I use roll quite a lot. So if we click on the ripple tool and then scroll down to rolling edit So all this does simply is um, you'll see that this has got, uh an icon with Double arrows pointing in both directions. Um, and that's because when you grab a an edit point with the roll tool What you are doing is just moving that edit point along So i'm making Either the incoming or the outgoing clip longer or shorter depending on which direction i'm moving Um, but when I make one longer the other one gets shorter. So i'm basically kind of I'm sort of adding frames To one and and removing them from the other. It's kind of that kind of action um And you can see in the program monitor that it's showing me exactly which frame Visually that i'm going to end up on when when I stop my edit when I stop moving Okay, and so that's um showing me Both of those frames right there, okay? um Some of these things are quite difficult to get your head around until you actually do them and they come become quite obvious um So it's very it's quite difficult for me to explain what's happening And you can't always see because you're looking at an edit that doesn't really make much sense to you But once you start working on your own clips and you have a go with these tools you'll start realizing how simple they are to use So my advice really is just get going with the with the editing practice with these tools first um because What you what you might find is you you're you're using um, or you're editing in a certain way for a long time before you realize Actually the rolling edit tool would do what i'm doing now, but in a much quicker way um So yeah, uh It's it's best to get get to know what they do so that you can just start using them immediately Straight away, okay Right So that's ripple and roll So the trim edit tool The trim edit tool is basically like um, like a grown-up version of of ripple and roll It's sort of a whole kind of framework that encompasses both ripple and roll In the same kind of edit basically, um, there are keyframes. Sorry not um There There are keyboard shortcuts. Sorry. There are keyboard shortcuts just there and I'll put these There are keyboard shortcuts here And I'll put these PowerPoint presentations up as well. So you can um, you know, you can access the information in them as well But for now, let's go back to Premiere And So to open up the trim edit window All you have to do is I'm going back to my uh pointer tool by clicking v if I just double click on any edit point like so My trim edit window will open in the program window And you can see what it's showing me is the outgoing clip and the incoming clip um at the moment The way that I selected that there was just the way that I double clicked it Um, just happens to have the left hand side or the outgoing clip selected Um, I can easily just click on these and you can see with the blue lines above and below Which one is being selected when I click on it? Or if I shift click on one Sorry. No, not not shift click. That's uh some other program If I click in the center in the center line in the edit point, then um, I will select both of these points Okay, so now Let's let's have a look at what happens if I just got one selected for now So if I've got the left hand side selected I can click minus one And I'll lose one frame From my outgoing clip or minus five and I'm losing five frames Okay, if I want to put them back plus five And there's a handy little counter over here on the left hand side That's telling me exactly how many frames I've moved Um at any given time Okay, okay And same on the other side. I can plus five frames there Or minus So like I said, there does come a point at which you can you can run out of frames when you hit the end of your clip, for example um, so I can add and minus Frames from either side or if I select both It will take So if I'm clicking the left hand side, it's going to take one off the left hand side and add it to the right hand side And if I do the right hand side, it's going to do the opposite Adding to the right and taking from the left Okay So same thing here, um, you know, it's it's all about getting getting in there having a go And you know, just sort of realizing how simple this this whole system is really it might look a little bit unwieldy at first um And I've got to admit, you know ripple and roll tools do the same as the trim edit window The trim edit window does it in a much more precise and measured way Um, but you can also be precise with ripple and roll as well. So, um, you know They they generally are a bit more kind of on the fly type Type edits, but um, you know, you can be precise with with with both ways if if you know exactly how to do that you can So, yeah That's uh trimming basically this the the whole process that we're talking about now with the trim edit window and the ripple and roll tools is called trimming and it's about kind of fine editing Getting down to the exact frame that you want Okay, so this is this point when you start building your actual edit rather than your first assembly Okay So That's the trim editor Uh hidden menus This is uh just Quite straightforward. In fact, I don't really need to go back to premiere for this. So hidden menus um, these three lines here And this little spanner here you'll come across these Uh in all sorts of different places all around premiere and they are hidden menus. Um, in fact, I will show you some So, yeah, there's one Um, there's a spanner there. There's a menu click on that. There's the three little lines there. There's another menu Um, where else is there's three lines there? Um There's a spanner here. So, you know everywhere you kind of look and see these things There will be a a little menu there um For you to have a look at Uh, so, yeah, lots of functions, um Are kind of hidden all over the place. Um, so if you're if you're kind of stuck looking for a specific function um To work on a very specific part of the um the edit window then Have a look for these hidden menus because that might be exactly where it is Okay I can't go through it Everything that's seen each of the hidden menus because as you've seen there's there's just lots of them We will go through some specific things later on. Um, but for now It's just good to know where they are and that you know, you may need them at some point Okay So the next thing is window layouts. Um I've touched on this a little bit Uh with the tabs at the top here, so Each one of these tabs is a different window layout And a window layout just means, you know, the way in which Let's click the uh, yeah, so if we've got say if you if you want to close the um trim edit window is you just click Into the timeline somewhere and it will close it down window layouts are Just just that basically, um different ways that your windows are set out within Your particular tab Um, you can make up your own window layouts, you know, you can Select these little windows and move them around Drag them here and there You can actually move All sorts of things in in different places Um, and you can actually make a horrible mess Without By accident, you know completely by accident you can make a total mess of your window and now what have I done This is my main editing tab if I click away and come back to it still going to be the same I made a real mess of this um So all I need to do to fix that is going to window workspaces Sorry and reset to saved layout um, if I decide that I actually like this, um What I've done here and I've done it on purpose. I've moved things to where I want them I can go to window workspaces and save as new workspace And I can save that as total mess Okay, and now when I go into my workspaces I've got a total mess down at the bottom But also now because I've saved that as total mess if I go back to my editing tab Oh, that's still a total mess. So how am I going to fix this again? Yep. So it's window workspaces reset to saved layout, okay Because I saved it as a different name then it's going to reset to its proper saved layout Okay, so Are we getting on? We finished so That's um premiere video tutorial part 2.1 editing extended Finished so look out for the next few tutorials and I'll see you in the next video soon Okay. Cheers. Bye