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HOTELECHOMIKE
Inspiring
October 22, 2018
Answered

HOWTO: PE14.1 / Scale a Static Image (Photograph)

  • October 22, 2018
  • 1 reply
  • 437 views

PE14.1 on a desktop PC running MS-WIN7.

When I insert a photo into the timeline and select Clip / Scale to Frame Size the entire photo appears

with black bars to the left and right due to the aspect ratio.  Thus what I want to do is to zoom into

the image (& maybe move left/right & up/down) until the frame is filled.

The only way I have found to date is to use the Pan & Zoom tool, select the part of the photo

I want in the first focus frame and then deleting the second focus frame (which is present by default).

Is this the correct way?  Using Pan & Zoom seems rather like using a sledgehammer to crack

the proverbial nut but so far I have no other solution.

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer Steve Grisetti

You can right-click on the photo on the timeline and, under the Clip menu, de-select Scale to Frame Size to see the photo at its actual size. (In my books, I recommend keeping your photos smaller than 2500x1875 pixels to avoid overloading the program.)

If you want your photo to fill your video frame, you're best manually keyframing its motion paths, as I show you in this tutorial.

Basic Motion Path Keyframing with Premiere Elements - YouTube

1 reply

Steve GrisettiCorrect answer
Legend
October 22, 2018

You can right-click on the photo on the timeline and, under the Clip menu, de-select Scale to Frame Size to see the photo at its actual size. (In my books, I recommend keeping your photos smaller than 2500x1875 pixels to avoid overloading the program.)

If you want your photo to fill your video frame, you're best manually keyframing its motion paths, as I show you in this tutorial.

Basic Motion Path Keyframing with Premiere Elements - YouTube

HOTELECHOMIKE
Inspiring
October 22, 2018

I've added a link to the video to my collection of items to look at when searching for solutions (the problem

with only occasionally working with videos is that one forgets "howtos" after a period of time...

I assume that the Pan & Zoom tool is just a convenient method to set keyframes in a particular way

(having had a look at the keyframes on a clip that has Pan & Zoom enabled).