The |
Premiere screen is divided into four main areas - |
Preview, Sequence Viewer |
Project and Timeline. and Two small areas - Tools and VU. | |
The lower left of the screen is your Project window Browser, which is like a file cabinet for your project within which you put your media files - audio, video, still pictures, |
and sequences/timelines. |
hovering your mouse over the project window and pressing the "~" key. Your whole screen will become the project window. Press the "~" key again to stop panicking. The new columns will tell you which files are video, which are audio, which are both video and audio, how many tracks of audio there are, the duration of each clip, etc. |
Just |
above the Browser is the |
Source Preview window, where you can display and play individual video clips you |
drag from the Browser. |
, it will be displayed in the Viewer. |
blue triangle-ish thing in the |
wide horizontal box (with tick marks) that you can click on and drag to the left or right to move or scrub through the clip. |
(while the Source Preview window is active) on your computer. To stop playing the clip, just press the spacebar again. |
Below the |
Sequence Viewer is the Timeline, where you assemble your video and audio clips into a sequence to create a movie. |
Sequence Viewer, which will play whatever "sequence" of clips is in your Timeline. |
If you drag a video clip that also has two audio tracks from the Viewer into the Timeline, it will be displayed in the Timeline as a single light blue horizontal video track, with two separate |
darker blue horizontal audio tracks underneath. |
blue triangle-ish object you can click on and drag to the left or right to move or "scrub" through your sequence of clips. |
" \ ". Premiere will then zoom out to reveal all the clips in |
the timeline. |
Press the I Key (for IN) at the desired point where you want your clip to start playing. Then hit the O Key (for OUT) at the point you want your clip to end. You will see |
brackets appear in the window at the points you pressed the I and O keys. |
Text and pictures borrowed liberally from Berkely Graduate School of Journalism Knight Digital Media Center.
http://multimedia.journalism.berkeley.edu/tutorials/finalcut/movingclips-timeline/