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Thanks!
ОтветитьThanks Colin ... This was exactly what I was looking for !! I wanted to take 12 sequences and have them all in 1 sequence ... So i see that all I had to do was highlight all sequences and drag them into a new sequence.... I was trying tring to copy /paste them but the effects were not transfering properly ...... I will try the way you showed us.. Thanks again for sharing your knowledge :))
ОтветитьHi! So I nested a sequence. Inside the nested sequence, there is a background that is quite large. THE BACKGROUND GETS CUT when I go outside the nest and move it to the right or left side. Is there an effect where I can collapse the nest (similar to After Effects) and the background extends?
ОтветитьHi Colin
I'm trying to make a Nesting and run into the following problem. After I lassoed all the clips plus audio and clicked nesting the images are nested but the audio is not. I just can't figure out what I'm doing wrong now. Do you know it?
Greetings Lou Kruisbergen
Nice video; super helpful! One followup question:
In that last example, where you had the 4 sequences (show intro then three shows), if you wanted to, say, add a Constant Power crossfade from the end of each show into the beginning of the next -- is that possible at this level? I'm working on a project with a similar structure where I want to have individual chapters of clips in their own sequences but have a master sequence of all the sequences lined up together. Each chapter has hard audio cuts at either end and I would love to be able to apply the crossfade across nested sequences like I can across regular clips.
Thanks for all your hard work!
Thank you for your time sir ❣️. Is there a way to play with velocity of keyframes in premiere easily ?like the graph editor in AE .
ОтветитьHow can i use this in a new timeline or another video production. i Have a sequence that I want to use in future videos. TIA
ОтветитьNesting is pretty much essential to Premiere Pro CC, since some of the bugs can be bypassed by nesting. Unfortunately, there are just TOO many bugs in Premiere Pro CC 2020.
ОтветитьAnother clear and detailed explanation which is easy to understand. Great that you explain things so that people without much experience can understand the stage.
Thanks
Jerry
unstructured, undescribed, nothing.
ОтветитьThank you for this video, Colin. I have a question though. When I nest, the nest loses information from the clips within. For example I positioned several (>100) clips off screen, that I want to move into the screen all together, so I nested them to put keyframes on the nest and pan/zoom them. Unfortunatly, everything that was outside the sequence frame was left out :( I know there is a way to make the sequence frame bigger and then export to a 1080 sequence but then I would lose all my positions from my current work, which is almost at the end of editing since nesting is mostly done at the end and I just discovered this flaw in adobe pp at this point. If there is a way to solve this, I would be so happy because at this point I can't believe why you just can't choose the area you want to nest or why it just doesn't keep all the information (even if it's off-screen)???
ОтветитьAre there performance issues to look out for when nexting, or over-nesting?
ОтветитьHi I'm from buenos aires Argentina. I LOVE your videos and are so so helpful!! you seem to be a great teacher! thanks!
ОтветитьHii Colin ,
How Are You?
How can we export individual clips with changed frame rate and changed resolution in premiere
This guy is a gift to us all.
ОтветитьGood video, as usual
ОтветитьThank you!
ОтветитьPlease turn audio scrubbing OFF next time you make a tutorial. It is incredibly distracting. Thanks.
ОтветитьHello, Good Morning, you said you don't use nesting, I think its a good thing, could you plz explain why don't you use? just for my knowledge... Regards
ОтветитьThanks Colin your Videos have made my learning of Premiere pro far easier than. What it would have been. Thank you sir.
ОтветитьI have a question. Is there anyway to make the Nest transparent so that I can still see the different cuts inside the Nest because I don't always want to open the nest just to check where one clip ends and the other starts?
ОтветитьHi. So the first clip that is imported into the timeline is always the master aka main sequence?
ОтветитьSuper explanation!
You have a nice voice to listen to
Subbed
Subscribed!!! Love this. Do you go other software tutorials like Resolve or Media Composer??
ОтветитьYou are the best Premiere Pro teacher hands down. There is no better.
ОтветитьGreat example, it is also amazing if you have footage that doesnt match your sequence settings but you want to apply stabilizing ect to it you have to nest it and apply the effect inside the nest
ОтветитьI use nests a lot like pre comps in after effect. When certain effects only work well on unaltered footage.
For example i use a lot of 4k footage in my 1080p sequences. If I want to stabilize those clips, I have to use a nest because warp stabilizer dosen't work with footage that has been scaled.
Another time I use nests is when I work with 120p slow motion. If I want to add a blur, or even just a simple opacity fade, the key frames don't match the timeline as they follow the original frames.
So using nests to alter footage to the properties you want is great :)
Good Job, thanks
ОтветитьYou are a good teacher 👍
ОтветитьHello Boss, I am regular watcher you are a very good teacher and have nice videos, can I ask personal question, how much you earning monthly form you tube :) ?? Thanks
Ответить👍
ОтветитьGreat vid.
I am dying to know how your tools are arranged.
Do you use a keyboard and mouse?
If so, which mouse?
Do you use a wacom tablet when editing in Premiere Pro?
Finally, could you show a pic of your set-up and spec yopur mouse, and keyboard?
Thanks
Great description of the use of nesting. Some years ago I worked on a soap opera that appeared on our local cable access show. It had a very complex opening that introduced every character at the beginning. Whenever there was a cast change I had to update the opening. I see that with nesting I'd just have to make the changes to a copy of the nest and then use that opening until the next change.
Each show was in a separate project. So here's the questions:
1. Can I copy a nest from one project to another?
2. Does it make sense to have a separate asset project to contain the many elements such as the openings and building establishing shots that are used in multiple show projects?
3. I always kept all the shots for each show in a separate folder. I imagine it would be best to keep all the asset files in their own folder along with the asset project. When I copy a nest from the asset project in the asset folder into the show project in that show folder, will the copied nest still be linked to the assets in the asset folder?
4. Do you have any other tips on managing assets that are used in multiple projects? (It's very easy to inadvertently change or move an asset that will make past shows unrenderable.)
5. Another issue is how to archive a complex show to make sure all it's assets get saved in a way that makes them restorable later.
Hey Colin. Nice video as usual. I can think of a situation where I use nests a lot. While stabilizing a clip that has a speed change applied OR does not match sequence settings, nesting is the best option. :)
Thanks for your videos... Appreciate your time and effort.
Thanks Colin 👍
ОтветитьVery nice Colin. Do you have multiple projects open at the same time?
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