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Known Participant
March 16, 2023
Open for Voting

Keyboard shortcut mapping for "Overlay" Edit

  • March 16, 2023
  • 8 replies
  • 896 views

Please add a mappable keyboard shortcut for the "Overlay" edit mode!

 

I often have to overcut hundreds of timecode-burn edits in a sequence using a new clean master, and would like to be able to mark in/out points on the timeline, based on the existing clip in V1, then edit the clip in the Source Monitor onto an empty track above that clip, without having to manually toggle source/track assignments. 

 

I basically want to be able to perform the same action that occurs when you drag a clip from the Source Monitor to the Program Monitor, then dropping it on the "Overlay" tile, except using a keyboard shortcut!

 

It really surprises me that this very useful edit mode can only be executed via drag and drop!

8 replies

Participant
August 23, 2025

Also bumping this request. Juggling source/timeline patching can be incredibly time-consuming and clunky, but having an assignable hotkey to quickly overlay a clip onto the first availble track with no fear of overwriting anything would be game changing. And the fucntionality already exists, we just want to hotkey it! Please, Adobe.

Participating Frequently
August 19, 2025

I will also bump this to express frustration - it's bizarre to me why you still can't create custom shortucts for these: Overlay, Insert Before, Insert After.  Here are other posts of users requesting the same thing.

A shortcut is more convenient than clicking and dragging onto the program montior. These are functions I would find extremely useful, but never use because clicking and dragging takes 10x the amount of time as a single key press. I would suggest that many people don't use these because it's inconvenient - not because the functionality itself isn't potentially useful. The features exist - let people use them.

 

Maybe someday someone from Adobe will chime in.

Known Participant
August 18, 2025

Bumping this request for Premiere Pro 2025. The lack of a keyboard mapping for this great feature continues to be very frustrating!

thepixelsmith
Community Expert
Community Expert
July 12, 2024

@MikeJM 

I assume you are right that not adding a keyboard shortcut is an oversight since the features were added at very different times and I believe for different types of users.

Using the Source Patching switches is a really old method (it's how I was taught to edit 30 or more years ago) while the Overlays (thats the name for all the options that appear when you drag footage into the Program monitor) were added much later to match the feature set of Final Cut Pro which was already at the time introducing a more visual drag and drop style of working. 

And yes, there were older users who considered the entire overlay system unneccessary since there were already workflows to do the same thing. Though you can argue which is better or more efficient.

Participating Frequently
July 12, 2024

I just discovered the Overlay edit mode today and was excited to assign it to a shortcut. I am stunned that it doesn't exist. I can think of no good reason for it not to.

Sure you can move the source patching to a specific track, check that there's nothing on that track, and then use "Overwrite", but that's an argument for why the Overlay edit function shouldn't exist in the first place. It does exist, so why doesn't it also exist as a shortcut? It seems like an oversight. Personally I think being able to use a shortcut to "overlay" clips without having to worry about patching or 'deleting' anything could be pretty darn useful.

thepixelsmith
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 25, 2024

I assume there is no movement on this because this is basically the process done when you use the Overwrite keyboard shortcut and move the Source Patching selector to the upper track.

Don't you only have to more the selector once at the beginning of your process or am I maybe missing something?

Known Participant
June 24, 2024

Bumping this request for 2024! It's frustrating that there's still no keyboard mapping for Overlay edits!

Participating Frequently
March 16, 2023

For the sake of this explanation, assume your video cut is on V1 and you want to add your new version to V2.

Set the track selector on the timeline side to V1. 

Move your CTI above the clip you want to replace.  This will automatically highlight it.

Mark the clip in-out (keyboard default "x")

Load your replacement clip in the source monitor.

Move the V1 indicator on the source side of the timeline to the V2 position.  (You only have to do this once.)

Hit overwrite (keyboard default ".")

Rinse and repeat.

 

Modify to taste.