John Wiley
January 13th, 2011, 12:17 AM
I've recently migrated from Vegas to Premiere and one of the big things I miss is track level fx support. I am currently on CS3 (I got it off a friend to get used to the Adobe workflow, with the view that I'll soon be getting CS5) and was wondering if there have been any changes or added functionality to allow track level FX in newer versions?
I shoot concerts and weddings, and edit using one track per camera and switching back and forth between them. In Vegas my workflow was to sync, cut the clips up, then add CC to match each camera using the Track FX. Then I would touch up individual clips if they needed it - say when a cloud passes overhead at an outdoor wedding and it got a bit darker - using the Clip FX. Then I would use the Output FX to create the overall 'look' or final grading.
With Premiere, my first wedding I edited I started cutting it up, then realised I needed to CC the whole original clip. So I pickout out one event, CC'd it then copy and pasted that onto all the other clips on that track. I kept editing away until I realised there was a slight difference between the footage still and I needed to adjust it - this meant deleting every individual effect from each event on that track one by one, then redoing it.
Since then I've edited a few more wedding with CS3 and tried a few different ways - applying effects/CC first before cutting (this slowed down my computer too much, and if I bypassed the effects then I would still have to go through and individually switch them all back on. Plus if any minor adjustment was needed I would be back where I started in the first project) as well as using nesting, placing the full clip into a seperate timeline then nesting that into the main sequence, then doing all CC on the original instance, but this seemed a bit slower at times as well.
Am I missing something? Is there a "bypass all fx" button which will allow me to do CC before cutting then easily swtich everything on or off as I please to improve performance? Or some hidden way of applying track level FX? Even a way of deleting a particular effect from all the clips it has been applied to would be extremely useful - the same way you can copy and past effects to multiple clips at once. I love the overall workflow/organistation of the Adobe suite, and I've come to love the shortcuts and keystrokes, but Premiere is missing a few things compared to Vegas that really seem to slow me down when I'm editing.
I shoot concerts and weddings, and edit using one track per camera and switching back and forth between them. In Vegas my workflow was to sync, cut the clips up, then add CC to match each camera using the Track FX. Then I would touch up individual clips if they needed it - say when a cloud passes overhead at an outdoor wedding and it got a bit darker - using the Clip FX. Then I would use the Output FX to create the overall 'look' or final grading.
With Premiere, my first wedding I edited I started cutting it up, then realised I needed to CC the whole original clip. So I pickout out one event, CC'd it then copy and pasted that onto all the other clips on that track. I kept editing away until I realised there was a slight difference between the footage still and I needed to adjust it - this meant deleting every individual effect from each event on that track one by one, then redoing it.
Since then I've edited a few more wedding with CS3 and tried a few different ways - applying effects/CC first before cutting (this slowed down my computer too much, and if I bypassed the effects then I would still have to go through and individually switch them all back on. Plus if any minor adjustment was needed I would be back where I started in the first project) as well as using nesting, placing the full clip into a seperate timeline then nesting that into the main sequence, then doing all CC on the original instance, but this seemed a bit slower at times as well.
Am I missing something? Is there a "bypass all fx" button which will allow me to do CC before cutting then easily swtich everything on or off as I please to improve performance? Or some hidden way of applying track level FX? Even a way of deleting a particular effect from all the clips it has been applied to would be extremely useful - the same way you can copy and past effects to multiple clips at once. I love the overall workflow/organistation of the Adobe suite, and I've come to love the shortcuts and keystrokes, but Premiere is missing a few things compared to Vegas that really seem to slow me down when I'm editing.