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Francis-Crossman17221443
Community Manager
Principal Product Manager
October 20, 2020
Question

DISCUSS: New Captions Workflow in Premiere Pro

  • October 20, 2020
  • 147 replies
  • 114909 views

UPDATE: January 29, 2021

Since the innitial post back in October of last year we have made a ton of progress and some of the details originally posted here are no longer acurate.  I have updated the post to be more accurate to the state of things today.  

 

Here are some important changes to be aware of

  • The Premiere Pro beta is now version 15 (starting January 26, 2021)
  • The captions workflow in on by default - no need to enable it
  • The beta menu has been removed (because you don't need it anymore - the advanced beta features are always on)
  • Applications for speech to text early access has closed and those who have been accepted should have recieved an email.  The email you used to apply needs to match the email (Adobe ID) you use to log into creative cloud. If you did not recieve an email stating that you have been accepted, or if you are logged into creative cloud using a different email you will contininue to see the message stating that speech to text is coming soon.
  • Broadcast closed captions are now supported CEA 608/708, OP47, Teletext, EBU Subtitles.
  • Exporting is working (burned-in, sidecar, embedded) and queue to Media Encoder is working too now.

 

Thanks to everyone for testing and for all your awesome feedback! - Francis

 

The captioning workflow in Premiere Pro is getting a complete makeover and you can be the first to try it out!  We have a new text panel for editing and viewing your captions as text.  Captions now have their own track on the timeline so they can be edited just like video.  Styling uses the power of the Essential Graphics panel so you can make fantastic looking captions. 

 

Best of all – we will be adding speech to text and auto captions powered by Adobe Sensei – coming later.

 

Some important things to know before you start testing this feature

  1. Just like any beta software, we do not recommend using this for mission critical projects since features are likely to change over time. 
  2.  The Premiere Pro beta has been updated to the next major version – 15.  This means your projects will NOT be backwards compatible with the current shipping version of Premiere Pro – 14.x.  All projects created in Premiere Pro Beta, even if you don’t use captions, will be saved as version 15. 
  3. Opening existing projects in Premiere Pro Beta will ask you to save a copy of your project in the new project version. Take extra care with Team Projects since you do not get a version update warning and you can mess up the project for your entire team!
  4. If you have existing captions in a project that gets upgraded, we will convert from the old style captions to the new style.  We will do our best to match the styling, but do not guarantee a pixel-perfect transition. 

 

So, if you’re good with all that, read on . . .

 

Enabling the Feature:

  1. Update to the latest Beta version - you're done.  It's on by default now

 

Quickstart Guide: 

Download this sample project to follow along PR New Captions Workflow quickstart.zip

 

  1. Open the sequence The climber - start here and familiarize yourself with the spoken dialog.
  2. Open the Text panel from the window menu and make sure it’s showing the Captions tab.
  3. Locate the SRT file in the project panel The Climber - subtitles.srt
  4. Drag the SRT file into the sequence and drop it anywhere. 
  5. A new caption track is created, and all the caption items are placed at the correct time.
  6. Place the playhead over one of the caption items to select it.  This should activate the Essential Graphics panel into editing mode.
  7. Change the Style in the Essential Graphics panel by choosing a different preset from the Style dropdown.
  8. Notice the font, size, color, and background have been updated.
  9. Play the sequence and watch the captions follow along in the Text panel.

 

Play around with visual styles in the Essential Graphics panel and try editing the text in the Text panel.  Read on for more detailed info on the various pieces of the workflow.

 

The Text Panel
Open the Text panel from the Window menu.  This is where you interact with text and it has two tabs – Transcript and Captions

  1. Text panel – open from the Window Menu
  2. Transcript tab – This is where you can create automatic speech to text transcriptions, navigate the transcript, and create automatic captions.  This is only available to those who been accepted into the eary access program for speech to text.  All others will continue to see the "coming soon" graphics.
  3. Captions tab – Navigate and edit caption text.
  4. Search – find characters, words and phrases in your captions.
  5. Next / Previous search result – use to navigate search results.
  6. Replace / Replace All – used to replace search results with new text.
  7. Add Caption – this will place a blank caption at the playhead in the current sequence
  8. Caption number – a sequence number to count your captions
  9. Timecode – TC start and stop of the current caption item.  This is not editable.  To change the timing of the caption, edit it in the sequence.
  10. Caption text – the text of the caption itself.  Double click to edit.

 

The Caption track - working with captions in the Sequence

We have completely reimagined the way captions work in Premiere Pro. If you have used captions previously in Premiere Pro, this is totally different – much better we think. Please tell us what YOU think by leaving a public comment below.

Create and delete caption tracks

There are a few ways to create a new caption track.  You can drag an SRT file onto the Sequence or use the “Create new captions track” button in the Captions tab of the Text panel. To delete a caption track, right-click on the caption track header and choose “delete track”

 

Drag an SRT file on the sequence

Dragging an SRT caption file onto the Sequence will automatically create a new caption track at the top of the Timeline.

 

Keyboard Shortcuts

To see all the keyboard shortcuts available for captions, open the keyboard shortcuts menu from the Premiere Pro menu and search for "caption".  Here are some notable ones.  There are many other which do not have default assignments.

  1. Add a captions track - option/alt + command/ctrl + A
  2. Add a new caption segment at the playhead- option/alt + command/ctrl + C
  3. Go to next caption segment in the timeline - option/alt + command/ctrl + UP
  4. Go to next caption segment in the timeline - option/alt + command/ctrl + down

 

Captions tracks

  1. Caption track setting – the CC button

This can hide the caption track area or solo just the active caption track if you have more than one.  It is useful if you want to declutter your timeline. It does not turn off the active caption track from rendering in the program monitor, however. 

  • Hide all caption tracks
  • Show all caption tracks
  • Show active caption track only 

 

  1. Active Track/Visibility – the eyeball icon

This will enable/disable Program Monitor viewing of the Caption track selected. Only one Caption track can be active at a time, so when you make one track active, the other tracks will automatically be disabled. You can also choose to disable all Caption tracks. Inactive Caption tracks will dim making it easier to note your active Caption track. 

 

  1. Label

By default, this will show the caption track format (eg Subtitles, CEA-708, CEA-608, etc.) You can right-click the Caption track header and choose Rename to choose a custom name (same functionality as A/V tracks)

 

  1. Right-click the caption track header

Additional caption tracks can be added by right-clicking in the caption track header – choose “Add Track”. You can also delete or rename a caption track in the same way.

  1. Caption tracks area

Caption tracks will always be at the top of the sequence. Additional caption tracks are added on top. This will continue until you have reached 25% of the Timeline vertical space, then the tracks will stop “growing” and scroll bars will appear to the right. Caption tracks will never take up more than 25% of the upper space of the Timeline. This is dynamic, so if you increase or decrease the Timeline panel height, the 25% will adjust accordingly.

 

  1. Track Lock

Lock the track to prevent editing.  This functions the same as A/V tracks.

 

  1. Track Targeting

The Caption track header has a ‘Toggle the track targeting for this track’ button with same functionality as A/V tracks.

 

  1. Sync Lock

The Caption track header has a ‘Toggle Sync Lock’ button with same functionality as A/V tracks.

 

Editing timing of caption items on the track

You can use all the familiar editing tools that you are used just like editing video and audio.

  • Select (one or many) You can select multiple Caption track items by Shift-selecting each item or marquee/lasso select items or use Select All (which will also include other items in tracks like video, audio, etc.)
  • Trim
  • Ripple Trim
  • Razor/Add Edit: You can add an edit/razor a Caption item as you would with any Timeline item and Track Targeting is supported. The difference is that when you razor a Caption item, both items will have the same text which you can then modify in the Text panel
  • Copy/Paste: paste of Caption item(s) follows Track targeting which allows you to copy and paste captions items between tracks.

 

Styling with the Essential Graphics panel

Open the Essential Graphics panel from the Window menu.  This is where you choose things like font, size, color and position. Make sure you have at least one caption selected. This will activate the Edit tab of the Essential Graphics panel. If you have created and stylized text in Premiere Pro before, the following should be very familiar to you. However, for captions we are adding small enhancements such as zones, and vertical text alignment.

Styles

  • Create Master Text Styles for consistent styling across the entire captions track. A style saves all the settings made in the Essential Graphics panels, including font, alignment, color and more. Setting a Master Text Style to one caption applies it to all captions on the track. You can have different styles for different tracks.
  • Sync from Master Style and Push to Master Style: When changing the look of a caption you may want to push this change to the entire track for consistency, that’s were Push to Master Style comes into play. Or you might want to revert an edit to a caption back to the Master Style. Then use Sync from Master Style.
  •  

Text

  • Font: Set font, font style and font size.
  • Paragraph Alignment: For horizontal alignment use Left align text, Center align text, Right align text and Justify. We have now also added Vertical alignment with Top align text, Center text vertically and Bottom align text. This defines how a caption grows when adding additional lines. As an example, there is a good chance you will want a caption to be bottom aligned, this way a single line caption and the second line of a two-line caption will always be in the same vertical position.
  • Tracking: Loose or tighten the space between characters.
  • Leading: Loose or tighten the vertical space between lines.
  • Faux Styles: Bold, Italic, All Caps, Small Caps, Superscript, Subscript, Underline.

 

Align and Transform

  • Position captions with zones: You can choose from different zones to position your caption in different areas on screen, e.g. bottom center.
  • Fine tune position: Through Set Horizontal and Set Vertical Position you can add an offset to your zone setting.
  • Change the text box size: If you want to shrink or expand the text box size you can do this through Set Horizontal Scale and Set Vertical Scale. This will affect text wrapping and paragraph align settings.


Appearance

  • Fill: Change the color of your captions.
  • Stroke: Add single or multiple strokes. The Graphics Properties menu under the wrench menu gives you more control over stroke styling.
  • Background: Add a background box. You can choose the color, add additional padding and change the opacity.
  • Shadow: You can add a shadow and fine tune with controls such as opacity, angle, distance and more.

 

Transcribing the dialog into captions

You have three options for transcribing your audio and creating captions: speech to text, use a third-party service, or do it by hand.

 

Speech to text

  • Text Panel > Transcript tab
  • Only available for those who have applied and been accepted to the speech to text early access program.  Other will not have access to this feature.

 

Use a third-party service

If you already have a workflow that uses a third party transcription service, you can bring in that file.  SRT is the best option.

  1. Import the SRT file into your Premiere Pro project just like any piece of media
  2. Drag the SRT from the project panel into your sequence and let go anywhere
  3. A new caption track is automatically created, and the captions are placed on the track

 

Do it by hand

For short sequences, doing it by hand may not too much trouble.

  1. Open Text panel from the Window menu
  2. Go to the Captions tab of the Text Panel
  3. Press the “Add Captions Track” button – a new captions track is added to your current sequence
  4. Place the playhead at the beginning of your first piece of dialog (hint – use the waveforms in the audio to help align)
  5. Press the “+” button near the top of the Captions tab of the Text Panel to add a blank caption
  6. Double click on <Type your caption here> to go into edit mode
  7. Type out the caption text
  8. Trim the end of the caption in the timeline to align with the end of the spoken dialog
  9. Repeat for each caption you wish to add
  10. See the other sections on Working with captions in the Sequence and Styling with the Essential Graphics panel for more details on editing and styling.

 

Exporting your sequence with captions

There are three options for exporting captions: burned in, sidecar file, or embedded into the video file.  

  1. Make sure the caption track you want exported is visible by toggling the eyeball on (Toggle Active Captions Track).
  2. Choose File > Export
  3. Open the Captions tab in the export settings and choose burn in, sidecar or embedded
  4. Burned in and sidecar are supported with any encoding preset
  5. Embedded is limited to pro codecs like MXF OP1a, DNX, and Prores and requires that the caption track format be set to one of the broadcast standards like CEA-608
  6. Click Export
  7. Sidecar files will be saved next to the video file with the same name
  8. Queueing to Media encoder is supported too

 

Happy captioning!  Once again, we welcome your feedback.  Please leave comments below.

 

 

147 replies

Participating Frequently
January 8, 2021

Hi there, I'm super excited about this feature and just being able to have a better track editing capability is great. A couple of items that may have been covered but I'm struggling with:

 

Workflow:

1. Adding a new segment starts at the playhead and goes out as opposed to starting at the end of last caption segment to playhead. I guess it depends on where you start.

2. Shortcut key for adding segments when working in the timeline is a must. The mouse click in one panel and then moving the new segment to the proper area in the timeline is time that adds up

3. The scroll position of the text box keeps going back to the top when adding new segments instead of the bottom where the new segment is.

4. Clicking in the text area to add the custom text in the caption segment is buggy. Some times have to click in lots of different zones in the box to get it active, or have to click out and back in.

 

Timeline:

When I double-click on a caption segment I get this message:

I don't know what this means and when I choose Add to sequence it creates a new caption track. I don't want a new caption track, I want to go to that caption segment in the text workspace.

In addition, it highlights a random caption segment, not the one I double clicked on and pops up this message.

 

Thanks for reading!

Nate McFadden
Adobe Employee
Adobe Employee
January 19, 2021

Hello! Keyboard shortcuts have started going in for various actions. They haven't been assigned default keyboard shortcuts yet, but you can manually assign them!

 

Thanks for the feedback!

Participant
January 8, 2021

Here are two items on my "wish list" for the new captions workflow:

1) Allow multiple caption tracks to be active at the same time. In our documentary projects, we sometimes have separate subtitle tracks for narration and production dialog, which need to be activated separately in some situations, and together in others.

2) Allow a fade-in and fade-out of subtitles when they're burned in to the video. Perhaps you could add parameters to the Essential Graphics panel specifying the number of frames of fade-in and fade-out (default would be zero). This would allow the fade-in/out to be applied globally as part of a style.

Participant
January 7, 2021

The new captions workflow is a great improvement over the old one, which was very buggy and confusing. I have a question about the mapping from the SRT timecode to the timecode used internally inside of Premiere. Unfortunately, the SRT timecode format uses milliseconds instead of frame numbers, and there seems to be some ambiguity about how the milliseconds map to frame numbers. For drop-frame timebases like 23.976, the timecode appears to be interpreted as actual time in a non-drop timebase. For example, I changed the last subtitle in your example SRT file to start at 00:30:41,000, and it was placed at 00:30:39:03 in Premiere! The old captions workflow seemed to work in a similar way. If this is the way SRT files are supposed to work, I can live with that as long as the behavior is consistent and predictable. However, the subtitles should always be placed at exact frame boundaries within Premiere (which I don't believe is the case now, and is very confusing), and when you do SRT export, the mapping should be the consistent inverse of the import. Better yet, have at least an option for a straightforward mapping from SRT timecode to and from Premiere timecode.

Participant
January 13, 2021

I've tested the SRT export option, and while it does a timecode mapping which is approximately an inverse of the import mapping, it is not exact. As I said in the above post, if you import a timecode of 00:30:41,000 in a 23.976 sequence, it will be placed at 00:30:39:03. If you export that timecode, it will be written to the SRT file as 00:30:40,964. Import that, and you're at 00:30:39:02. Export that, 00:30:40,922. Import that, 00:30:39:01. It might be possible to work around this with a "fudge factor", but shouldn't the import and export be consistent? I'm just trying to get timecodes in and out of Premiere accurately. Another possibility would be to support the Spruce STL format for import and export (not the EBU N19 STL format, which you already export). I believe the Spruce format uses actual unconverted timecode numbers for sequences with a drop-frame timebase.

Moselskipper
Inspiring
December 30, 2020

Ich freue mich auf einfache Bedienung für .srt Dateien, da wir viel für YouTube untertiteln. Schön wäre eine Funktion welche Leerzeichen am Anfang oder Ende des Textes automatisch ausblendet. 

Participant
December 16, 2020

Loving what i've tried so far! Much easier to use than the old version. I am having an issue with scaling the text though, not the actual size, but how much of it is shown in each caption. Like i've had a whole sentence within the caption, but it doesn't all show up unless I drop the size of the caption! I'm editing for LinkedIn so I need captions on the large side and I have the space the stretch them over the entire screen but can't always get all the text i want in there without making it much smaller!

 

Thanks for all your hard work Adobe team!

I hope you know what I mean!

Stan Jones
Community Expert
Community Expert
December 16, 2020

I can fill the space, so I'm not sure what you're seeing. You can slightly enlarge the "box" the text is added to. 

 

Can you post a screenshot?

 

Stan

iambencurtis
Participant
December 16, 2020

To me, and my crazy brain, it makes sense to be able to tab from one caption entry to another as to be able to flow quickly with making multiple edits. This would function the same using shift+tab, but with moving backwards in the list. Is this something that makes sense to others, and if so, how likely is it that such functionality might be implemented?

Participant
December 16, 2020

Thanks for the feedback. Keyboard Shortcuts is on the team's backlog - please stay tuned for updates!

Participating Frequently
December 16, 2020

Hi. 

Thank you for the improvements with the caption track.

However I am quite confused about the use of styles. In our organization our users need to have the same style available as a default every time they create a caption track - or at least available with one click.
But as I see it in the beta, the styles are only saved as a part of a project. And when you open a new project, your saved styles are gone, and you are back to zero regarding fonts, letter sizes and all that. Or have I missed something?

In the old Caption window you could load styles that were present in the users "Captions Presets" folder in Finder.
What is the best way of saving styles for use in all projects?

Participant
December 16, 2020

Thanks for the feedback. Loading styles from libraries is on the team's backlog but I don't have an ETA. Styles can be saved and loaded as files from the disk - so even now you will be able to share styles and import them into a new project. Hope that helps!

Participating Frequently
December 18, 2020

Hi gurpsin.
Thanks for the info about loading styles. However, no matter how much I look for it, I can't find the way to load and save files from disk in the beta like you describe it.
Can you please enlighten me?
If a user has no way of loading styles in an easy way, I am afraid that we won't be using this caption workflow 😞 

johankokken
Participating Frequently
December 16, 2020

Will it be possible to (automatically) group media and (ebu stl-)captions (so they can be used in de source monitor)? In our news department we make several updates from the same story, and re-using the already translated captions would be an enourmous timesaver. Also, our captions are being archived, so if you later use 20" from a 50' show, you don't have to manually isolate the right piece of a captions track, or manually recreate them.

Alternatively, import and overlay captions on source window would be convenient.

Possibility to turn captions track on/off in source window.

 

Thanks for all the effort, the new captions workflow is far more convenient and robust than the old one. Can't wait to start using it at VRT.

Adobe Employee
December 17, 2020

Thanks for the feedback, Johan! We're currenly developing the source monitor workflow, and for video files that contain embedded captions that are loaded into the source monitor, the wrench menu will contain options for switching between caption streams in the file, or turning them off all together. When that embedded caption video file is added to the timeline, all of the caption blocks will be linked to the video and move in sync with it. Would that address the needs you are asking for, or is there additional functionality we could include that I am missing? 

-ParkerPremiere Pro Experience Designer@parker_gibbons
Participant
December 13, 2020

Someone else had applied, but I didn't get a reply to that comment, so I have a request.

I would like you to add support for importing/exporting WebVTT (.vtt) caption files.

Recently, we have been streaming video to the Web, and WebVTT conversion has become a bottleneck for us.

Inspiring
December 10, 2020

I note that when creating a sub-sequence the captions do NOT follow.  This should be an easy fix and should happen! I needed to make a clip demoing the new captions - I had to do it directly from the timeline and thus couldn't engineer in a dissolve in or out...would have to import and re-export the clip, not the best practice. Thanks...

Community Manager
December 10, 2020

Thanks for all the feedback! Unfortunately, we don't have subsequence working yet for captions. It is under investigation, but I can't give an ETA.