Adobe Premiere Pro Cs4 Video Transitions S
Hello K-Swoosh,The beauty of the Adobe programs is that they work together well. You could easily import a composition from After effects into Premiere Pro. After Effects has an effect called Typewriter Effect.In Premiere you would have to create that effect.Create your title, choose 'title' from the menunew titletype whatever you like and close the title window. Your title will appear to your left in the project window.
Drag the title to the timeline and click on it. It will appear in the source window.Go to effects (window to your left):EffectsVideo EffectsTransitionLinear WipeGrab the effect and drag and drop it to on your title in the source windowPress the small arrow to the left of 'linear Wipe'. The options to the effect applied will appear.Press the small arrow to the left of 'Wipe Angle' and change the degree to 270.Press the small arrow to the left of 'Transition completion'. A slider will appear.Try moving it to the far right and to the far left.
Notice that the text gradually appears and disappears. Take it to the far right, so that all the text disappears. Now press the Toggle animation which is the clock shape to the left of 'transition completion'. Now you are starting to use Keyframes to animate. Move the playhead to the time you want the first letter to appear. Press the 'Add/or remove keyframe button' and move one frame to the right with one press on the right arrow key. Move the 'transition completion' slider so that the first letter appears completely.
Move the playhead to the time you want the second letter to appear. Press the 'Add/or remove keyframe button' and move one frame to the right with one press on the right arrow key.Move the 'transition completion' slider until the second letter is seen completely. Repeat until all your text is animated this way.Hope this is clear. Hello K-Swoosh,The beauty of the Adobe programs is that they work together well. You could easily import a composition from After effects into Premiere Pro. After Effects has an effect called Typewriter Effect.In Premiere you would have to create that effect.Create your title, choose 'title' from the menunew titletype whatever you like and close the title window.
Your title will appear to your left in the project window. Drag the title to the timeline and click on it.
It will appear in the source window.Go to effects (window to your left):EffectsVideo EffectsTransitionLinear WipeGrab the effect and drag and drop it to on your title in the source windowPress the small arrow to the left of 'linear Wipe'. The options to the effect applied will appear.Press the small arrow to the left of 'Wipe Angle' and change the degree to 270.Press the small arrow to the left of 'Transition completion'.
A slider will appear.Try moving it to the far right and to the far left. Notice that the text gradually appears and disappears. Take it to the far right, so that all the text disappears. Now press the Toggle animation which is the clock shape to the left of 'transition completion'. Now you are starting to use Keyframes to animate. Move the playhead to the time you want the first letter to appear. Press the 'Add/or remove keyframe button' and move one frame to the right with one press on the right arrow key.
Premiere Pro Effects List
Garmin topo sweden v2 review. Move the 'transition completion' slider so that the first letter appears completely. Move the playhead to the time you want the second letter to appear. Press the 'Add/or remove keyframe button' and move one frame to the right with one press on the right arrow key.Move the 'transition completion' slider until the second letter is seen completely.
Repeat until all your text is animated this way.Hope this is clear. Yes,Linear Wipe would work well too.Now, some time back, I needed the effect of chalkboard writing, but did not want to do this with a pure 'write on' effect, and to use a 'handwriting' font instead. I also 'distressed' the type a bit, as one would see with chalk text.For this, I used PS to produce the finished DVD Menu (in my case), and Layer Masks to 'reveal' the text, in the direction that one would write. For the ultimate control, I just output Layer Comps for use in PrPro to create a Motion Background AV file. To enhance the visual, I used an SFX of chalk on a blackboard, adjusting it for the initial strike of the chalk at the beginning of each letter, or separate portion of every letter.Hunt.
When you say 'typed slowly,' I am not following. When a typewriter types a letter, it's a pretty quick action. Do you mean that you want the display of each letter to go more slowly, as thought the typist is hunting and pecking? That pacing can be adjusted via Keyframes. One can have each letter display and then pause between letters, if that is desired. For the display (typing) of each letter, I would keep that quick, or it looks more like the letter is fading in, rather than being typed.Good luck,Hunt.