 Hello everyone, welcome back to another Adobe Premiere Pro 2020 tutorial guys. In this one I'm going to show you the just released auto reframe effect. That's right guys, Adobe's been hard at work with their own AI technology. It's called Sensei and basically they've gone ahead and watched people as they watch screens and with Retina technology that I don't friggin remotely understand. They're basically watching where people are looking and by tracking that motion they're basically figuring out where things should be on the screen in terms of centering the correct thing. So if you've got like let's just go ahead and start and I'll show you what I mean here because that might have made you a little bit unsure what the hell I'm talking about. I got a dog here running through a park. Okay, here we go. This is as good as it gets. I dragged and dropped that into the timeline and we've got a new sequence and yeah, we got a pupper dog just giving her guys. I love my dog. I got a bulldog. He's amazing and yeah. So I'm just going to go ahead and chop that at five seconds so that we don't have these huge files when we start doing the analysis. So what they've gone ahead and done and this is just a stock video but basically the auto reframe sets it so that whatever we're supposed to be focusing on stays in the center and why would you do that? Well, simple because sometimes you take a shot in HD and then you want to take that part and make a bloody Instagram story and Instagram stories are vertical and they use a 916 aspect ratio and Instagram, for example, likes to use squares or rectangles for five ratios and Twitter likes HD but they only go 1280 by 720 and YouTube's 1920 by 1080, 4K, etc. etc. all these different aspects ratios and you kind of want to be able to make videos quickly and auto reframe. So that's what this is. So what I'm going to do is I'm going to show you how this works first off. So the first step here and I'm just going to show you quickly. I'm going to go to sequence. I've only got this video in the sequence but this still is probably the best way to do it. You want to go to sequence, go all the way to the bottom, hit auto reframe sequence. Now here's where it gets cool, right? Because you can select your aspect ratio. Now this was filmed 1920 by 1080. No, this was 4K, I believe. Pardon me. But in this one, we want to take standard 16.9 and we want to switch it to 916 because this way you'll get a really, really good idea as to what the hell is going on with this auto reframe. So I'm going to select aspect ratio, vertical 916 and that again is under sequence. Drop it all the way down, auto reframe sequence. Now I'm going to go ahead and create that. And here we go. You're going to see it does analysis and it reframes here. You'll see that it's got new motion frames here and it's gone ahead and done some analysis and it's reframed it. So now I'm going to hit space bar and in this video the doggy stays in the shot and you'll know it because it's doing all of these little motions here. Let's see, if I double click on it for example you're going to see here that you're going to watch this thing move. So when I move it, as I move it through you're going to see that it keeps moving the frame here as it's required in order to make sure that that dog is in the frame all the way through. Now this is done in the 16 by 9 but that's how you use auto reframe. I'm going to do another shot here. I've got this nice looking lady here doing some weird stock video banana crap. You know what, actually I'm going to cancel all of that. I'm going to go ahead and right click on her create a new sequence from the clip and bang, you're going to see again we're in full HD. I'm going to go ahead and I'm actually going to make some really big changes to it so you guys can really see. So I've gone ahead and gone out to 25%. I'm going to double click on it. I'm going to increase the size drastically. I'm going to move her to the, well I guess it's her left, our right and now I'm going to go ahead. I'm going to go to sequence. I'm going to go make, pardon me, auto reframe sequence and this time what do you think? Do you guys want to run a square? Let's run a, let's run a square one to one so it's going to create a square. Bang, now she's off but you'll see right there at the end it moved it over, it auto, basically auto centered her. Now I'm going to take this out. These are the key frames that it created and when we hit space bar and I'm going to just play it back you're going to see that she is kept in the middle of the shot. I double click in, watch. You'll see this as I move forward her body is kept in the middle and the frame jiggles and moves around it. This is all AI guys. This is Adobe's awesome new effect. It works very, very well. There are other ways to do this where you can go into each shot and change the sequence settings manually but it just seems like a lot of work to me. So I would just go with sequence auto reframe sequence and if you have one shot or 20 shots it will work guys every time. That's how you do it. If you have any questions or if you have any videos that you want to see let me know. That's it for this one. I'll be back soon with a whole bunch more stuff. Thanks for watching.