Auto-resizing video and images in Adobe Premiere Pro This tutorial shows you the three different settings for resizing imported media and how some settings may make your export look soft or slightly blurry. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - QUESTIONS? ► 🤍videorevealed.com/contact Visit NVIDIA RTX Studio ► 🤍🤍nvidia.com/en-us/design-visualization/workstations/ Check out BELECO photo backgrounds ► 🤍🤍amazon.com/s?k=BELECO Artlist Music 🤍bit.ly/vidrevartlist Artgrid Stock Video 🤍bit.ly/vidrevartgrid Motion Array 🤍bit.ly/vidrevmotionarray FXhome 🤍bit.ly/vidrfevfxhome - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - THANKS! 😃 To all the wonderful people who have supported VideoRevealed 😃
Thanks, almost had a panic attack on the jpeg quality after import, but this helped.
Hands down most respectable instructor on Youtube. Thanks again for another detailed and easy to follow tutorial.
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Sir, Can yo help me? I am trying to import a video in to pro from my trial cams. The format is MP4, ratio is 1080x1920, I have no other problems playing htese videos on my phone or on any other platform on my computer. When I import them into adobe, they show up as a large green screen with the video in a very small impossible to see square in the upper left hand corner of that selected section. It only does this to the videos from my trail cams. I'm at a complete loss of what to do. If you can help me, I'd greatly appreciate it, there seems to be no logical reason why this is happening.
ty good sir
This really saved me a ton of time! Thanks a million! :-)
Found a bug (I think).. two clips, different sizes. Create MultiCam - doesn't work.
I accidentally clicked out of the window and lost your screen.
Don't ever do that to me again hah.
I'm really struggling with this.. Comprehension is a rea- oh look a butterfl
Thank you for this....I am new to creating YT content and I messed up my first video with a simple misspelling of a name and had to go back to the original Photoshop background image and correct it but when I brought the corrected background image into Premiere everything was completely messed up. So I am starting from scratch sort of.....You mentioned setting PhotoShop files to proper size but you didn't say what those sizes should be. Could you please elaborate? I also have another question about importing PhotoShop files without flattening the layers. I know PhotoShop files can be imported into Premiere without flattening the layers but can that file be used with the layers intact in the timeline in Premiere? I ask this because if that can be done then if I ever have to make a correction to something in a PhotoShop file in the future it would be handy to have those layers left intact so I can just right from Premiere use the feature that lets you "edit in PhotoShop". If you use that feature and make and save the changes to the PS file, close out of the file in PS and return to Premiere will the changes show up on the file in PP? I am hoping the answer is yes because that would be really useful.
amazing video, but I hope you can possibly help me out with something similar. the zoom in this video was super crispI have a 1080p video that i cropped and scaled for a zoom effect, but the text is blurry and washy. i couldn't quite find something that could fix that, so what did you do for the crisp zoomed text?
Thanks dude wanted to make something like a slideshow with some 16:9 images I had made on Photoshop and I was too bored to resize everything manually in premiere pro since they came in the timeline bigger than 16:9
Very helpful! Thanks!
Wow this saved me hours HOURS!!! Thank you for the detailed explanation!
Excelente. Thank you. If i have a shoot film in HD video, and i want to export for a projection room film, (digital cinema projector), what have to do ? What should I do to preserve the aspect, and the image quality when enlarging it?
Thanks
so what is classed as pretty powerful computer nowadays?
Thank you.Mathis is very helpful
If you really want to notice the difference, put a "scaled" 4K video into a 1080 sequence, and then, copy and paste the scaled a video from the timeline into a 4K sequence. The scaled video will be smaller than the 4K dimensions, and if you increase the scale of that video back to the original 4K dimensions, the pixelation will be prominently noticeable – the equivalent of scaling a 540p video to fill in a 1080p sequence.
Once I learned "Set to frame size," I never went back to "Scale…" You just never know when you may want to zoom an image in a little closer, even if only to better center a person that's supposed to be in the middle. Choosing "Set" allows you to do this without losing that little bit of quality, which is always nice.
Thanks that was something I did not know