Premiere Pro
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Adobe previews AI object addition and removal for Premiere Pro
Last year Adobe launched Firefly and now the company is showing how it'll be used its video editing app, Premiere Pro.
Adobe Premiere Pro is getting an AI tool to cut your hems and haws
The new features launch alongside the commercial release of its Firefly for Generative AI.
Adobe is bringing generative AI features to Photoshop, After Effects and Premiere Pro
Firefly, as Adobe is calling the new system, is actually a family of generative AI models, the first of which is trained to work its magic on both images and font effects
Adobe makes it easier to collaborate on video production thanks to Frame.io
Adobe Creative Cloud now includes tools to help you collaborate on videos, and After Effects now has M1 support on Macs.
Adobe Premiere Pro now uses AI to fit music to your videos
Adobe has updated Premiere Pro with an AI feature that automatically re-times music to fit your video.
Adobe Premiere Pro now runs natively on M1 Macs
Following a beta release in December, Premiere Pro now officially supports M1 Macs.
Adobe releases Premiere Pro beta for M1 Macs
Adobe has released a beta version of its Premiere Pro video editing software for M1 Macs.
Adobe's Black Friday sale discounts Creative Cloud plans by 25 percent
First-time subscribers can sign up for a $40 monthly Creative Cloud plan until December 3rd.
Apple brings ProRes RAW support to Windows video editors
Thanks to a combination of more affordable cinema cameras and increasingly powerful software, professional video producers are able to net some impressive results. One major part of the equation for achieving high-quality footage is shooting in a RAW codec, which creates lossless files that are suitable for color correction and other enhancements. Apple's ProRes RAW codec isn't a very popular choice among shooters, but that may change now that the format isn't exclusive to Apple's computers. The company released beta software that lets Windows editors work with ProRes RAW files in Adobe's Premiere Pro, After Effects and Media Encoder. This means they won't have to devote time or computing power to transcoding the files -- they can simply load them into their editing suite and get to work.
Adobe's advanced AI editing tools graduate to Creative Cloud apps
Adobe has just released major updates to Creative Cloud apps like Photoshop, Premiere Pro, After Effects and Lightroom. On top of the usual speed and productivity enhancements, many of those have gained time-saving features powered by Adobe's AI Sensei algorithms, some of which we saw in sneak peaks.
Adobe adds new AI tools in Photoshop and Premiere Elements 2020
Adobe Photoshop and Premiere Elements 2020 are now available, and both have some new AI-enabled features. The simplified versions of the company's flagship creative applications help amateurs edit high-quality photos and videos, and with the new Sensei-powered tasks, they're easier to use.
Adobe Premiere Pro can automatically reframe your videos
Reframing video footage to fit a different aspect ratio is a painful process. Simply changing your project's settings from a widescreen aspect ratio to a square one won't cut it; you'll also have to shift the footage around to keep all the action in the reduced frame. Auto Reframe in Adobe's Premiere Pro will do that shifting automatically from now on. Revealed today at the International Broadcasting Convention, this feature will help editors quickly create videos suitable for different platforms, something that can take hours when done manually.
Adobe outs Premiere Pro CS6: a 'massive release' with better multicam and more
If you turned your back on FCP X even after the big update, then the latest version of Adobe Premiere Pro may be of particular interest. CS6 brings an enhanced 64-bit playback engine that can handle 5K resolutions and higher, new trimming options, compatibility with Mac touchpad gestures, a Warp Stabilizer that was previously confined to After Effects, expanded multicam editing for more than four cameras and other stuff too plentiful to list in one breath. Inhale. That's what the source links are for.
WoW Moviewatch: Too much of a good thing
A long time ago in a land far, far away, the boys of Oblivious Films decided that they wanted to make epic machinimas. However, Macheath had to learn Adobe Premiere Pro first. What follows is a video, Oblivious Hardcore, made about two years ago, before The Grind, their award-winning series, was created.Drewbie, of Oblivious Films, was kind enough to let me use this as an example of what not to do in a machinima. As a lesson for himself, Macheath managed to fit a mishmash of filters, transitions, text, and effects into just over two minutes of video, proving that you can have too much of a good thing. Machinima isn't an all you can eat buffet. Choose your main course, be it filters or effects, wisely and let the sides, like text and transitions, enhance your meal!Previously on Moviewatch ...
Adobe Premiere Pro, Soundbooth updated for Leopard
Here's a quickie update notice: Adobe recently updated both Premiere Pro and Soundbooth for complete Leopard compatibility. Premiere Pro 3.1.1, a 54MB update, also includes "important bug fixes" (but what they are, is anyone's guess), and is available from Adobe's website, in addition to the 4.1MB Soundbooth fix. Happy video/sound editing in Leopard!