

The easiest way is to select the source clip, and then choose Edit > Copy, and then select all the targets and choose Edit > Paste Attributes ( Figure 4, below).įigure 4. There are a couple of different ways to do it. Now I’ve got to get the adjustment I made to the Motion control in Figure 2 over to all other 31 slides. But where I want the slides to appear is where you see them in Figure 2, where the presenter video isn’t obscuring them.įigure 3.
#PREMIERE PRO EFFECTS TUTORIAL FULL SIZE#
When Premiere Pro imported the images, it scaled them to full size and placed them in the middle of the screen, as shown in Figure 3 (below). (To see this, or any other screenshot in the article, at full size, click on the image.)įigure 2 (below) shows the positioning that I want in the first slide.įigure 2. The webinar in the Premiere Pro timeline.


The speaker video in V4, and titles in V5.įigure 1. There are three components, composited together: Slides (32 of them) in V3. Applying Adjustments and Effects from One Clip to Others on the Timeline Using Paste Attributesįigure 1 (below) shows my webinar. We’re going to look at two different projects: a video shoot and a webinar. Here are some ways that Adobe Premiere Pro CC lets you speed through this tedium. As we all know, many editing jobs include lots of repetitive actions.
