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Known Participant
May 2, 2021
Question

Holding a 2 second clip for 5 seconds, etc.

  • May 2, 2021
  • 2 replies
  • 1616 views

This may be a stupid question but ... I am constantly needing to hold a clip for longer than the duration of the clip and Premiere fights me on it.

Let's say I animate in a little dancing bear who comes into the bottom of the screen and then just remains there. Or I animate a name and title coming onscreen. My original animation lasts, say, three seconds but I need the final frame to remain onscreen for 12 seconds.

 

I'd like to play the 3-second animation, and then freeze on the last frame and hold that for 9 seconds. But Premiere won't let me. Since the original clip was only 3 seconds long, the longest Premiere will let me hold a freeze frame is 3 seconds. 

So I have to either create three separate instances of the freeze frame and put them back-to-back, or I have to render out the final frame of the animation as a separate image file and then import that into Premiere, or some other semi-kludgy work-around. 

I'd like to just say "Hold on this frame" and have Premiere hold on that frame for as long as I want. Why is this so hard? Am I missing something obvious?

TIA.

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2 replies

Community Expert
May 2, 2021

If you add the frame hold before the last frame (not at the end of the clip) it should let you drag it out to the length you want.

Known Participant
May 2, 2021

I'm not sure what you mean. Frame holds apply to the entire clip, don't they?

Known Participant
May 2, 2021

Add Frame Hold does not have a pop-up menu. Your screenshots are incorrect. The popup menu is for Frame Hold Options (as the effect already suggests).

Frame Hold Option: entire clip

Add Frame Hold: Cut the clip at the CTI and the rest of the clip is frozen. (Richards suggestion)

Insert Frame Hold Segments: adds a freeze-frame for 2 second at the given point of the CTI.

 

Many people find this Frame Hold confusing and use an Export Frame feature instead.

There is no right way or wrong way of doing this.


Alright. So I should "Add Frame Hold" and leave the Frame Hold Options set to Sequence Timecode. Correct?

If Frame Hold Options are set to In Point or Out Point or Source Time Code, then the length of the held clip is limited to the length of the original clip (for some reason).

But if Frame Hold Options are set to Sequence Timecode, then I can hold that frame forever.

I'm not sure I understand why the different options act as they do but thank you very much for helping me with this issue.




Community Expert
May 2, 2021

Step to the last frame of the clip, make a freeze frame and display that as long as you want. 

Known Participant
May 2, 2021

Cool. So ... I've been using Add Frame Hold from the pop-up menu. I presume that's the wrong way to be doing it, and I should be creating the freeze frame elsewhere?