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coreyl
Participant
September 11, 2018
Answered

Help - All JPG images zoomed in on timeline

  • September 11, 2018
  • 3 replies
  • 23447 views

Hello, does anyone know why any time I bring a JPG image into the time line to add as B-roll to a video it appears to be zoomed in on the middle of the picture?

Can't find any reason why it keeps doing this.

    This topic has been closed for replies.
    Correct answer Sumeet Kumar Choubey

    Hi coreyl,

    You may experience this if you drop in an image or media file which has a larger resolution than the resolution of the sequence or timeline.This usually occurs as your images can be of much higher resolution as compared to the standard videos resolutions like full HD or 4K.In these cases, you may need to scale your image down by using the Scale option under the Effect Controls tab to manually scale the image down to your like ( Please note that this option allows you to manually scale the height and width of the image either individually or scale them uniformly).

    The other way to scale the images would be to right click on the desired image on the timeline and then use the option Scale to Frame Size ( This option resamples the image pixels so this may cause a loss of effective image pixels while scaling down ) or Set to Frame Size( This option won't resample the image pixels so the original amount of image pixels will remain intact, which might be useful sometimes if you decide that you may need to zoom in a bit. As it has the original pixel count so it gives the best possible quality if you zoom in or scale up )

    Also, if you are planning to use such huge image files regularly at multiple times in the project, then you may even set a preference in Premier pro to automatically either Scale to Frame size of Set to Frame Size. To enable this preference you may follow these steps.

    • Open Premiere pro and go to Preferences > Media
    • Then set the option for Default Media Scaling to either Scale to Frame Size or Set to Frame Size

    Hope you find it useful.

    Regards

    Sumeet Kumar Choubey

    3 replies

    Sumeet Kumar ChoubeyCommunity ManagerCorrect answer
    Community Manager
    September 11, 2018

    Hi coreyl,

    You may experience this if you drop in an image or media file which has a larger resolution than the resolution of the sequence or timeline.This usually occurs as your images can be of much higher resolution as compared to the standard videos resolutions like full HD or 4K.In these cases, you may need to scale your image down by using the Scale option under the Effect Controls tab to manually scale the image down to your like ( Please note that this option allows you to manually scale the height and width of the image either individually or scale them uniformly).

    The other way to scale the images would be to right click on the desired image on the timeline and then use the option Scale to Frame Size ( This option resamples the image pixels so this may cause a loss of effective image pixels while scaling down ) or Set to Frame Size( This option won't resample the image pixels so the original amount of image pixels will remain intact, which might be useful sometimes if you decide that you may need to zoom in a bit. As it has the original pixel count so it gives the best possible quality if you zoom in or scale up )

    Also, if you are planning to use such huge image files regularly at multiple times in the project, then you may even set a preference in Premier pro to automatically either Scale to Frame size of Set to Frame Size. To enable this preference you may follow these steps.

    • Open Premiere pro and go to Preferences > Media
    • Then set the option for Default Media Scaling to either Scale to Frame Size or Set to Frame Size

    Hope you find it useful.

    Regards

    Sumeet Kumar Choubey

    Inspiring
    September 11, 2018

    Go to Preferences > Media and set the Default Media Scaling to "Set to frame size":

    MtD

    Participant
    May 11, 2023

    This 100% worked for me - thank you so much; you're a livesaver!!

    Community Expert
    September 11, 2018

    It sounds like your images are larger them the sequence, try using set or scale to frame size.