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Participant
March 5, 2021
Answered

Plugins vs Templates vs Presets vs Motion Graphics Templates

  • March 5, 2021
  • 1 reply
  • 4803 views

Hi Friends,

I am very new to video editing did a bit of googling to find clear definitions of the above terms and how they compare to each other.

 

I couldn't find any such documentation. Could anyone point me to such info or explain the difference between the above in Premiere Pro pls. 

TIA

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer Peru Bob

Plugins are separate programs that when properly installed become part of Premiere Pro.

 

Templates are project files that can be used by substituting the original media with your own media.

 

Presets are saved effect parameters that can either be included with Premiere Pro or installed to Premiere Pro.

 

Motion Graphics Templates are graphics (or text or both) templates created in After Effects.  The Mogert is then imported into Premiere Pro where the user can change any parameters or replace objects, providing that the Mogert creator configured the project to allow the changes.  

The user can also make changes if the project is opened in After Effects and can be saved as a new Mogert.

The typical uses for Mogerts are titles, lower thirds, and animations.

1 reply

Peru Bob
Community Expert
Peru BobCommunity ExpertCorrect answer
Community Expert
March 5, 2021

Plugins are separate programs that when properly installed become part of Premiere Pro.

 

Templates are project files that can be used by substituting the original media with your own media.

 

Presets are saved effect parameters that can either be included with Premiere Pro or installed to Premiere Pro.

 

Motion Graphics Templates are graphics (or text or both) templates created in After Effects.  The Mogert is then imported into Premiere Pro where the user can change any parameters or replace objects, providing that the Mogert creator configured the project to allow the changes.  

The user can also make changes if the project is opened in After Effects and can be saved as a new Mogert.

The typical uses for Mogerts are titles, lower thirds, and animations.

abemail1Author
Participant
March 5, 2021

Amazing. Thank you Peru Bob!

 

Exactly the info I was looking for. I was surprised there wasn't some Premiere Pro user guide that explained it. 

 

Thanks again!

abemail1

Peru Bob
Community Expert
Community Expert
March 5, 2021

You're welcome.