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Participant
July 15, 2012
Answered

How do I select the Poster Frame when exporting to video?

  • July 15, 2012
  • 9 replies
  • 81895 views

PP CS6

I cannot find how to select the frame that I want to appear as the Poster Frame in the exported video.

I can select it I can change one by right clicking an imported video OK but not the sequence!

I've been through every menu I can find & even Lynda.com training!

I'm sure that there must be a way but I'm blowed if I can find it!!

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer Kevin-Monahan

Hi,

Make a feature request here: https://adobe-video.uservoice.com/forums/911233-premiere-pro

 

Thanks,
Kevin

9 replies

Werner Brix
Known Participant
February 1, 2022

I was looking for an answer too and found a solution which works perfect in windows 10

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UrZMFFUsnzU

 

It's called tag editor. Link for download:

https://github.com/Martchus/tageditor/releases

 

I tried it 30 min ago. Happy!

 

Participating Frequently
October 26, 2022

Both Tag Editor and MP3tag replace the poster frame on the MP4 file.  But in my experience, when that video is uploaded to Dropbox, the poster frame reverts back to the original.

Participating Frequently
May 28, 2021

Guys, I was suddenly invited at the very end of a project to 'stop that picture of me appearing on the file'

Yeah, suddenly I was in Poster Frame Hell.

After some headless chicken time I checked out an absolute favorite of mine MP3tag, and for MP4 files it works a treat.

and it works - you can find out how to do it but its really really simple to do - I was in a rush, I used the snipping tool to grab the frame I wanted and MP3tag did its stuff...

can we ask for this to be built into media encoder

 

Chris

Kevin-Monahan
Community Manager
Kevin-MonahanCommunity ManagerCorrect answer
Community Manager
May 28, 2021

Hi,

Make a feature request here: https://adobe-video.uservoice.com/forums/911233-premiere-pro

 

Thanks,
Kevin

Kevin Monahan - Sr. Community & Engagement Strategist – Pro Video and Audio
Participating Frequently
May 29, 2021

Done, thanks for the link...

Chris

eckelsteve1
Participating Frequently
November 18, 2020

Sounds good, but I can't find in AME a preset that allows you to export a still image "alongside your video."  Could you clarify which preset I should be looking for?

"You can create standalone JPEG images from PP using the camera icon below the monitor and can semi-automate the export of a still image alongside your video using presets in Adobe Media Encoder..."

Participant
April 3, 2021

It is possible to place a thumbnail during the encoding process. While encoding with "Me" move the slider in the preview window until you find the area you want to show as thumbnail then encode. That area should come up as your thumbnail post encoding.

Participant
May 23, 2020

Was searching for the answer to this very question and this community discussion from 2012 came up first in organic search results.  I'm using Adobe Premiere Pro CC 2020.

 

Setting the poster frame is done in the project panel.

Select Icon view (bottom left corner third icon from left) in your project panel.

Hover over your project video thumbnail/icon in your project panel.

Move your mouse over the video thumbnail/icon until you see the desired poster frame.

Right mouse click and select Set Poster Frame.

Kevin-Monahan
Community Manager
Community Manager
May 23, 2020

CA,

Sorry, the OP was actually trying to find out how to set the desired thumbnail displayed on YouTube or the like. That said, I do like your tip and it is something that everyone probably needs to know. Thank you.

 

Kevin

Kevin Monahan - Sr. Community & Engagement Strategist – Pro Video and Audio
Participant
September 30, 2023

The OP?

Inspiring
October 12, 2019

I remember good old QuickTime Pro used to be able to do this, there was actually a "select poster frame" in the settings.

The only setting of poster  frames I've found in Premiere is for internal use, i.e. setting the poster frame of clips in your bin so you can quickly see what they are about. But no exporting the final clip with a specific frame, unfortunately. One would think this would be a simpe task for such a gigantic suite of apps, but... no.

In a project I recenlty did for Social Media I ended up instructing the client (who will be uploading the film) how to select a poster frame on YouTube and Facebook. I just hope they do it right.

iD2comm
Known Participant
February 7, 2020

since there seems to be no "feature" to set a poster frame, as explained by Dave_Merchant, can anybody explain how the software "determines" what the visual representation of the clip is ... is there an algorithm that might be able to be "gamed". As far as I can tell it is rather random, no?

hollyt1988
Participant
January 25, 2019

Also looking to solve for this, i'm creating a lot of short videos to be released on social media, i can't set the poster frame in Hootsuite for instagram for buisness which means each and every file has to go through a third party program to resolve.

Do we know if this is in the pipeline to be fixed at all? (and if not can we add it to the backlog?)

Participating Frequently
January 21, 2019

I came here looking for the same information.  it boggles the mind that this is not easily baked in, and left to Youtube or whatever hosting service is being used.  I don't want my client choosing, I, want to choose what gets used as the video thumbnail no matter where they publish.  I use Google drive for distribution for clients because they can preview videos in the browser before downloading and re-uploading to their choice of services. 

NewSkyProductions
Participant
January 5, 2018

I'm sort of looking for an answer to this too. To say it's not a function of a video encoder is absurd. I need to change the settings of a video file; what other kind of program would I use?

I personally am trying to upload stock to Getty and this is how they choose thumbnails. They supply a doc for using QuickTime Pro 7, but I can't find any similar function in QuickTime X or really any other program. I don't want to pay for QTPro7 just for this one barely-working function.

For reference, Getty's instructions say in QuickTime Pro 7 to go to View->Set Poster Frame, then to move your playhead to the beginning so QuickTime doesn't lose its mind (I'm paraphrasing), then File->Save.

This should really be a feature of Premiere / Media Encoder. I'm not sure what other services support it (Vimeo? YouTube? Wistia?), but it would be super-helpful if they do for the sake of explaining thumbnails to clients.

Stephen_Spider
Inspiring
July 15, 2012

You might not want to hold out til you find it. A poster frame is not a function of a video encoder.

Participant
July 15, 2012

Thanks! At least now I know that the answer must lie in Premiere Pro itself. But where?

Jon-M-Spear
Legend
July 15, 2012

Unfortunately you're barking up the wrong tree.  It is not a function of Premiere either.