In this tutorial for the Premiere Pro Video Adrenaline series, Richard Harrington addresses the companion product: Adobe Bridge. A standard problem with tapeless acquisition is that it is difficult to name your clips. Use Adobe Bridge to batch rename your clips and organize your workflow.
Author: From Still to Motion, Video Made on a Mac, Photoshop for Video, Understanding Adobe Photoshop, Final Cut Studio On the Spot and Motion Graphics with Adobe Creative Suite 5 Studio Techniques
Re: Organizing Footage with Adobe Bridge by Rowby Goren43597340
Thanks Richard.
Now I know to start with Adobe Bridge and organize my files there before importing them into Premiere.
I especially like how you demo how to create folders, move the files into those folders -- and then import the folder into Premiere -- creating well organized bins.
Re: Organizing Footage with Adobe Bridge by Josemarcos Ganan69637665
Ok, cool. But what's about the codec information in Bridge? I would like to see codec info at first sight as in Aperture. Is there any way to do that in Bridge? Thanx for the podcast. Very useful, as always.
Premiere Pro Video Adrenaline: Creating Custom Backgrounds Play Video In this tutorial for the Premiere Pro Video Adrenaline series, Richard Harrington demonstrates a graphics tip for quickly making your own customized backgrounds. Remix your own stock backgrounds inside the Premiere Pro timeline for a completely new look.
Premiere Pro Video Adrenaline: Adobe Media Encoder Play Video In this tutorial for the Premiere Pro Video Adrenaline series, Richard Harrington uses the Adobe Media Encoder to go from your finished sequence right to the web, blu-ray, or other outputs with a quick hand-off and jump back in to your editing.
Premiere Pro Video Adrenaline: Documentary Photo Effects Play Video In this tutorial for the Premiere Pro Video Adrenaline series, Richard Harrington takes a look at how to integrate still photos into your Premiere Pro timeline to acquire the very popular documentary photo effects style with pans and scans.
Premiere Pro Video Adrenaline: Making Lower Thirds Play Video In this tutorial for the Premiere Pro Video Adrenaline series, Richard Harrington explains how to take a stock background and force it to be the duration and the color that you desire for your video project and turn this background into a lower third.
Premiere Pro Video Adrenaline: Mastering Transitions Play Video In this installment of Video Adrenaline for Premiere Pro, Richard Harrington shows how to use transitions inside of PP. There are some subtle changes and nuances in CS5.5 that you might want to use.