In Premiere Pro, I have been experimenting with new tools and effects in Adobe Premiere Pro. I wanted to research how to edit effects and see what certain effects can do. I researched the volume effect and the pitch shifter effect. First, to add an effect to part of your video, you simply have to find it and drag it onto the section of video you're trying to edit. With the default workspace, the effects are in the bottom left. There is a drop down for different types of effects, such as video effects or audio effects. On the panel in the upper left hand corner of the default workspace, you can edit the effects. With the volume effect, you can easily slide the volume up and down up to an extra 6 dB or 287.5 dB less. The pitch shifter effect is a bit more complicated. There is the option to use a custom setup for the effect, or you can use a slider to adjust the pitch. The slider adjusts the ratio in which the pitch is shifter. It goes from a ratio of 0.5 to 2.0. Together, these effects can be used to perfect audio in videos made in Premiere.
helpx.adobe.com/premiere-pro/using/applying-removing-finding-organizing-effects.html
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Once again, I have made a video in Adobe Premiere. I used bits of a conversation to create an interaction between two people. The video is below. Most of the camera angles are shots and reverse shots, with the exception of one. While using Adobe Premiere, I have started to learn how to use composition with film techniques as opposed to just art techniques. I wanted to look up good usages of different shots, and when to use them. Specifically, I researched the bird's eye view and the point of view shot. Good times to use the bird's eye view are when you want to show off an area from above. A lot of the time, the bird's eye shot is used to show grief or foreshadowing. Another common use of the bird's eye shot is showing a scene while it is raining. The point of view shot is used during horror films often so that the viewer feels scared. In general, point of view shots are used during a specific part where the director wants the viewer to feel what a character is feeling. When used correctly, both of these shots can enhance videos greatly.
https://www.premiumbeat.com/blog/power-point-view-pov-shots/ In class, we started working in Adobe Premiere. I've had to learn about a new workspace and learn how to use a few new techniques to be able to make a new form of digital media. The video I made was a simple slideshow of images increasing in the intensity of the same color. The images were mostly pink, and as the video progressed, the pacing changed and the colors got more vivid. I started off with a very light pink image that featured nature, which is calm. The first few images were of nature, and as the video progresses, there are more things going on. The images change to more of human things, including power lines, a person, and lights, as the pink color gets brighter and more vivid. I researched some ways that videos can get more intense when I made this and I researched some about colors getting more intense. I used these techniques in creating my image.
Link to video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yoAugSReAyo&feature=youtu.be
https://kzoinnovations.com/3+Ways+to+Make+a+Powerful+Video |
AuthorThis is the blog feed of Cooper Oljeski for Fundamentals of Design and Animation. Archives
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The views and opinions expressed in this blog are solely those of the author and do not represent those of Durham School of the Arts or Durham Public Schools.
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