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Hi All,
I am building graphic templates in the Essential Graphics tool. We want behind out our graphics to be a standard 'frosted glass' effect. Currently I achieve this by using a separate adjustment layer. Ideally I would like to add the frosted glass to the graphics to utilize the standard "responsive desgin" to achieve standard look across all templates.
I do not like the look of trying to frost a colored rectangle (white or gray) I think the best looked is through the adjustment layer so that it is clear with the frost attached.
Has anyone had success in linking an adjustment layer to an essential graphic template to fully utilized the Responsive Design feature?
Thanks!
You know something weird? I tried the very same recipe for this effect that worked for me on my more powerful MacBook Pro here at work, but my 2013 MacBook Pro at home gave me a black screen instead of the blurred and cropped background image. I'll continue to investigate. It may be a question of having a powerful enough computer to pull this effect off.
After thinking about it, I found that an Adjustment Layer inside the EGP is completely unnecessary. It really doesn't do anything since the eff
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This is a workflow that is best done with an AfterEffects comp to create the mogrt to be used in PrPro. Ae mogrts can include clips and graphics and all sorts of things.
Neil
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Hi Neil,
Thanks for the thought. My problem is that I need a consistent frosted glass effect to be built in the graphic that is apart of the key. I am trying to avoid rebuilding the layers in premier each project. Your solution for using after effects I have tried just would need to open AE each time and therefore almost negate the use of templates because the project would be fully open.
I have attached for the difference between the frosted glass effect between premier & AE, I could build the template in AE if the frosted glass looks the same and I can templetize it without a video clip to maintain the alpha channel.
After Effects -
Premiere -
Thanks!
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Are you trying to make it look like the After Effects still above? Surely this is just a white rectangle with a low opacity, which can be done in Essential Graphics in premiere. Or am I missing something here?
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Creating the frosted glass effect in Premier looks better than building it in After effects (in my opinion). So creating the template in AE and pushing the mogrt file to Premier is not ideal because I want the box to be responsive with the text that Essential Graphics provides.
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Hi MikeDZK,
Surely this is just a white rectangle with a low opacity, which can be done in Essential Graphics in premiere. Or am I missing something here?
This effect can be achieved with a duplicate of the V1 clip onto V2 that is cropped then blurred. You can also achieve this effect by adding an Adjustment Layer, add a crop effect, then blur it.
In the EGP, you create graphics that are self contained units—therefore, to do similar effects, you need to also add the source for the Adjustment Layer to act on. In other word, it needs it's own copy of the clip on V1 in order to act on it.
Hope that makes sense.
Regards,
Kevin
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I'm not sure I'm tracking ... the whole point of templates is to apply them en masse elsewhere. So making this in Ae would mean being able to simply drag/drop onto any clip as you wished in PrPro without further work in Ae.
Nor should an editor need Ae installed if you build the mogrt right ...
Neil
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Correct but i need the frosted glass feature to be link to the mogrt file but, building it in after effects does not look as crisp as building it premiere. I want responsive frosted glass box to go around my text.
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I tried myself (rank beginner on AE) to get that better look from PP in AE, but came up with the same thing you did. I've asked the AE guys for a tip and posted a link to this thread over there. here's that tread:Simple Frosted-Glass Look
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Hi Neil,
I have a mogrt in AE which uses a blur in the manner in which you described. However, unless I add a background, I cannot get the blur to show on the template (see images below). How do I get the blur to show up without a background?
With background:
Without background:
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This would make for a pretty great feature request however
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So build it in Premiere and then export the Mogrt from Premier?
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My problem which is apart of the intial question at the begingin of the thread is that Adjustment layers (like the one I use to create my frosted glass effect) cannot be added to the essential graphic layers. I would like this to be a part of the graphic template to help with the work flow.
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Sorry, I was just trying to duplicate the look in AE that you have in PP. I think I have that, but there was more to your question. Cheers.
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In Ae, you can have video clips, graphic items, other comps, all sorts of things included as part of a mogrt. And you can even use expressions to give the PrPro editor an ability to move things around the screen.
Perhaps Jarle Leirpoll​ could pop in. He's one of the top experts on this sort of thing.
Neil
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BenD,
Sorry you are having trouble setting up this template.
Adjustment layers (like the one I use to create my frosted glass effect) cannot be added to the essential graphic layers.
Actually, they can be. Just drag them into the stack in the EGP. Keep in mind that if you apply an adjustment layer in this fashion, you also have to drag the same source clip into the EGP so that it can affect a source that's also in the panel—in your case, it's the clip on V1.
Blur and Crop is added in the ECP:
Again, the only issue is that if you made a mogrt in this fashion, you'd need a new source layer for the fill to match the video clip on V1. So, for this to work as you'd expect--create the template without the fill (blurry image you call "frosted glass") and then, when you have a new image that needs this title treatment, add that manually to the bottom of the stack in the EGP.
So for this, you get both responsive design and the opportunity to place either the same source (the V1 clip in your case) or any other source you desire as the fill—an image of a soft red drape, for example.
So this works, but probably not as you hoped as it would work (without manual adjustment). A mogrt is not smart enough to reach outside its container and see the same frames from a source on another external clip and then apply them back in the template. You have to tell it which clip to use for each unique case. So you get most of the way there, I think.
Let us know if this technique helped you achieve what you wanted. If it did, please mark it as correct. If it is completely unsatisfactory, please indicate what you would like in a feature request here.
Thanks,
Kevin
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You know something weird? I tried the very same recipe for this effect that worked for me on my more powerful MacBook Pro here at work, but my 2013 MacBook Pro at home gave me a black screen instead of the blurred and cropped background image. I'll continue to investigate. It may be a question of having a powerful enough computer to pull this effect off.
After thinking about it, I found that an Adjustment Layer inside the EGP is completely unnecessary. It really doesn't do anything since the effect stands complete without it.
Here's what I came up with.
You can make a mogrt out of this, but of course, to customize it for your "frosted glass" effect, you have to drag in the same video clip to the bottom of the stack in the EGP (and the top of the stack in the ECP, as it has its sorting in reverse order from the EGP).
This was a fun problem to solve, by the way.
Thanks,
Kevin
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Building something out like this with an AE Mogrt is now possible in a more direct way!
Exciting news update!!
It's now possible to add videos to the Mogrt from within PR so that any of your, transitions, animations effects, and blend modes will be applied to the video you feed the Mogrt.
This feature is now in public beta in AE and Premiere Pro.
Here’s more info: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Akp8aXF-iwM&feature=youtu.be
Let us know what you think!