You boys with the 'hi-rez' monitors have overspent! You buy a 4k monitor and the pixels are too small. Thats the real problem. I use a 32" 2560x1440 preceicly because it gives the right size pixels and I can use default sizes for my desktop and programs. When you raise the scale-up on a program interface, you simply loose screen-real estate, so you pay to say you have the hi-res, but in reality, you are just scaling up things to use up that suddenly not-available screen area. More = less sometimes.
Besides, you shouldn't be using or discussing (here) that thing you are using and discussing. 🙂
Hello @MyerPj. What's your workaround for looking at your 4k video 1:1? Or are you happy scaling it or only seeing part of it all the time? For me, 1:1 is crucial as I bounce between PrP, Ch, AE, PS, ToonBoom and C4d. Compositing edges are important to see 1:1. A key that looks fine at 75% or 50%, has problems at 100%. Do you have an additional monitor capable of playing 4K? Thanks! Also here is a UI solution that allows a 4k image to be 1:1 while the UI can be scaled comfortably.
@MyerPj because the extra resolution helps with having a full size doc, or slack, etc etc, up on the screen while I'm editing. This is especially helpful when I'm four-walling or remote work with agencies as I am right now. In films, having an extra wide timeline is critical for me. Ultimately, I'm in favor of whatever allows you to get work done faster and more real estate help me do that. To each their own of course!
PAF, good reasons. What are we looking at with that screen shot. Have you increased the screen fonts for Premiere? If not, I'm not sure what we are talking about.
BGP That's pretty slick no doubt. Does the Windows version do the same thing?
Anyway, the video actually shows what I'm talking about. When he scales it up to '2' everything from the "Camera Lock" dropdown and down is lost. So, it's just like running a lower res monitor and not scaling.
The viewing of 4k video/images/graphics etc, is not what this thread is about.
Hey @MyerPj . Thanks for looking at thelink. I put it in as a generic illustration of how a UI (and fonts) can scale without the image scaling. If something like this were implemented in PrP (and AE) the UI could enlarge with out the monitor pannels enlarging. And because this is a PrP thread, it is also about the image -- even if the OP is asking about the font size. If you aren't interested in image quality (ie, you are ok with your OS scaling your image) this isn't the thread for you. I'm not sure if there is an OS that doesn't have the ability to scale these days. So the workaround has always been to set a 4k or higher monitor to some lesser resolution. But then you can't trust what you are seeing for image-critical use. When I use the " `" key, I want to see my 4k image at 100% uncropped. When I hit the " `" again, I want the UI to return (which it does) but to have a legible UI. Back when we were lucky to get a computer to play 320x240 video, this was not an issue. Now that we are working on 4k higher projects, it is an issue -- and one that we are encouraging Adobe to engage in like other software devlopers have.
if the issue is monitoring 4K material at 4K, I think there are solutions to output 4K from within Premiere to an external 4K monitor. Can't say I've ever done it or felt it was necessary, but Blackmagic and AJA make several solutions... And frankly, most computer monitors do not reproduce colors with sufficient accuracy. Of course, I may be mistaken... I have used the blackmagic decklink ultra (I think that is the name) to output 1080 video from within premiere because Apple in all there wisdom only allowed one external monitor to be connected from the first generation M1 macbookpro with out publicizing the fact sufficiently... Was a big surprise and luckily figured out this solution...
And I supposed this might have been discussed previously in this thread, but it's way too many pages to sort thru.
Hey @Michael Grenadier . Yes, an additional monitor is a good workaround. My challenge is that my main display is a 32" cintiq. I edit with it, draw on it, and stand in front of it whenever possible. It's so big, that to add additional displays above or beside it becomes an ergonomic challenge. Like many, I would prefer a single monitor for all my needs.( @pigsalreadyfly has lots of different apps open at the same time, with premiere pro being the legibility problem). A color timer has different needs... and a different setup. (I have no need for a client monitor while I'm tweaking, for example.)
Basic option for virtually every type of software. The entire discipline of UI/UX is geared toward accomodating the software user interface to the human being, not the other way around. Not just sofware. Car seats, airline flight decks, bicycles, smartphones; spreadsheet, color correction, other companies' editing and imaging software; word processors, databases. I think a more efficient question would be: what type of software does not have an adjustable UI to suit individual users?
Moderator Note: Link/text removed. Sorry. Please do not use the internal developer tool to change the application. It is against the corporate guidelines and is a request from Adobe Premiere Pro engineering.
Unreal Swandive? The 2 posts right above say it's not for us to use the console, then you post again after it was removed by the moderator on Flavio's post with the moderator saying:
Please do not use the internal developer tool to change the application. It is against the corporate guidelines and is a request from Adobe Premiere Pro engineering.
So Adobe has a ui font size scaling tool in the backend but won't give that to people for front end usage. Seems pretty odd not to, especially for accessibility purposes.
I can't find a way to increase the brightness of the interface fonts. Even the special features of Windows do not allow you to do this. Why is it possible to change only the brightness of the background in the apperance settings, but not the fonts? I find the fonts quite dim and would like to find a way to influence this. Thank you.
Note: please do not share the use or how to enable any undocumented features here in the community. I have to remove such comments by request from the product team. MOD
The public beta has text brightness options. That's now the "new" 25.x series that will probably "ship" around the first day of Adobe's MAX conference as it has the last several years.
dagmarillo, if you're on the mac, you can map "zoom" to control scroll wheel and zoom in where ever your cursor is. Not an ideal solution, but might help... Not sure if there's something in windows to do the same thing.