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I have a question about the usual Ken Burns Zoom Premiere effect.
Is it possible to make it smooth with some shortcut ?
Ok there is an easy in and easy out option, there are shortcuts for that
but it doesn't give you the fluidity to make it perfect, so I have to modify the Velocity curve every time just like on my screnshot. Can you otherwise make a super-smooth move in Premiere...?
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Premiere can't guess as to what settings would be needed for how much zoom and motion you want on every image. So you need to create one for probably each image size (roughly) you work with.
But once you create one and get the velocity set as you want, save it as a Preset. You should be saving tons of things you do as presets btw ...
Neil
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Thanks for the answer Neil 🙂 I'll try as you say with presets !!!
I am editing a long form documentary movie, and I have a lot of photos in very high resolutions.
(of course I've reduced it to offline work. it's a shame the proxy doesn't work on stills.)
... I move them in large close-ups and then you have to set this easy out very precisely ... It's a combination of anchor point and position and size parameters
I was wondering why Premiere does not do it as smoth as it is done in Ken Burns' films using simple easy in
And I have just discovered that the manipulation of velocity. gives me the desired effect only.
Cheers
Wojti
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Premiere allows for a wondrous amount of fine tuning user control, and isn't built to run on Auto. Most users don't want Auto.
But ... as I noted, any time you build any complex effect process, save it as a preset ... that is the way to speed up and automate Premiere, and it is totally controlled to your taste then.
Neil
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That's true, but often such effects need to be prepared quickly, because most of the time you want to spend on creation,
and you can do that tons of such effects.
And with different sizes and ratio of old photos , and when you create the animation to the specific parts of the picture to tell a story, it is hard to use presets, because it often takes a lot of time to re-edit.
But it's a shame you can't do it with an easy in-out parameter.
These movements do not always have to end at the last frame , then you can't see the end of move
and when you stop earlier, easy out always creates a jump at the end of the animation
I also noticed that with large scaling , it's more difficult to control the slowdown.
Wojti
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Jarle Leirpoll is a blazing fast editor/fx/sound/color guy from Norway, he's written by far the best and most comprehensive manual on using Premiere ... and teaches also.
He's totally focused on speed-speed-SPEED! of the editing process. His manual talks specifically about the "Ken Burns effect" ... how to build it, and how to save presets of it. When you go through one project, creating say 10 different setups for different image sizes and zoom/pan movements, you now have 10 presets that will cover a good share of your needs.
And all can be modified to taste and need later, far faster than creating from scratch ... and when modified, saved as a new preset expanding your tools.
To do this with an 'automated' process, you'd have to have a bunch of options to control to make it all work, and to modify for this image right now. If you have stored a decent level of presets, you can work as fast or faster. For Jarle, he'll be faster.
Neil
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Hi Neil thanks ,
I have this heavy book, both paper and e-book. Nice manual.
He wrote about it. 5 whole pages, I just took a look. I didn't know he was writing about it,
I have to practice it..
Wojti
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I just recieved my paper copy about 5 minutes ago! 🙂
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That is an awesome resource. One that I have both on my tablet and in the five-pound two-inch thick paper version. My elbow is sitting on it right now, it's that close.
Neil
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It's very impressive, for sure I wouldn't read it on a boat, as this book would sink like an anchor! 🙂 I was doing well on the PP manual, reading a bit most every Sunday at a local Gelsons along with a nice coffee, but haven't been since the lockdown. There's a lot of tips to pick up in the plain ol' manual.
I got this book basically on Neil's golden reviews. And I like having the paper copy.
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