- #Adobe premiere transition effect resizes clip how to#
- #Adobe premiere transition effect resizes clip Pc#
A typical 4:3 10.2 megapixel digicam picture can be 3688x2766 of course 14mp and up are even bigger. I know what Graemey is going through when he say's he's looking to what resolutions he can resize his pics before importing them into Premiere.
#Adobe premiere transition effect resizes clip how to#
There should be video tutorials on youtube and on how to do this if you're lost You can set keyframes for position, rotation as well So you would set a keyframe for the scale parameter at the current size (100%), then move the CTI (current time indicator, or "playhead") down the timeline, then set another keyframe for the scale parameter for something larger. You cannot pan much unless you are zoomed in first - this is one of those things that's hard to describe, so you have to play with it and see. The first frame will have the entire "poster" visible. If the majority of your slideshow is going to be like that (a wide shot of the entire photo, then zooming in and panning to various parts), then you can use the scale to frame parameter discussed above. I've been thinking about your previous reply, say using the window scenario, if the poster was visible htrough the window then my problem seems to be that only the middle of the poster would be visible, I would like the whole poster to be visible in the first frame then be able to zoom and say pan throughout the next frames until another image appears via a transition in the timeline.
#Adobe premiere transition effect resizes clip Pc#
You would have to provide more details on what your goals were (how are you going to watch this? DVD? Blu-ray? Web ? PC etc.) That partially determines what sequence settings you are going to use Unless you were talking about an intermediate size, like something not too big, not too small ? But if you have a bigger poster, you can pan and move that poster around, and still "see" stuff in the poster all around the edges The poster is the same size as the window. If you pan the poster around, black edges creep in, because there is nothing there on the edges. Think of it as looking out a window - if that video is a poster directly against the window, exactly the same size.
You cannot pan at all if you import at the same reduced size as the sequence setting. If you import at the original size, it's has more data. It seems that if I import at the original size things like zooming in or panning become difficult. I'm sure once before another member said that a particular size was good. I understand about the limitations of importing to scale (I think!) but is there a good universal size to import at.