Dana Vrajitoru
I310 Multimedia Arts and Technology
I310 Lab 11
Date: Tuesday, November 15, 2016. Due: Tuesday, November
22, 2016.
In this lab we will use Adobe Premiere to create a small
movie out of several movie clips on a theme of favorite programming
language.
Ex. 1.
Log on to Canvas, go to the course section, to Files, Week 11,
Lab 11. Download the video clips that you find there to your account,
as well as a gif image and the mp3 files.
If you work at home, you can record a short clip of
yourself telling us what your favorite programming language is and use
it in this project.
Open Adobe Premiere Pro from the CS 6 Suite. In the introduction
dialog, choose the option to create a new project, then give it a name
such as Programming Language or Lab 11. Leave the default options in
the first dialog and DV-NTSC Standard 32 Hz for the second one.
Importing clips
For each of the chosen clips, do the following: Click on File -
Import.
You can select multiple files in one import
operation.
Add the selected clips to the Timeline in the order in which you
want them. Use the zoom to increase the resolution of the
Timeline.
Title
Move the cursor to the beginning of the Timeline. From the Title
menu choose New Title - Default Still. Give it a name such as
Title.
This will open a title editor inside Premiere.
First check the box next to Background to set a color for the
background, then click on the black rectangle next to Color and choose
whatever color you want. Then set the Fill with a contrasting
color. Then using the text tool (marked T) type the title of your
movie, like Favorite Programming Language. Set the font and size of
the text so that it fits in the safe zone (marked by a rectangle),
then center it using the buttons on the left side of the editing
window.
Once you are satisfied with the title, you can close this
window. The title should appear in the Project area on the bottom left
side of the window.
Drag the title from the resources to the Timeline on the track
Video 1 and adjust its duration to 4 seconds by dragging the right
side of the title bar to the left.
Cutting a clip
Choose the first clip that you want to add to the movie and
double-click on it.
The clip should be display in a cutting area that
is the top left side of the screen.
Use the yellow tab to select the place in the clip where you want
it to start playing (usually a little before they begin to talk). Then
click on the { button to set the beginning of the section
you're going to use. Then find the end of the section to use, place
the yellow tab on it, then click on the } button to set the
end of the section. Then drag the whole clip to the Timeline on the
track Video 1 after the title. Repeat for each of the clips and add
them to the same track of the Timeline one after the other.
Video effects
In Tools area on the bottom left side of the window, click on
Effects, then open the tab on Video Effects. Try different effects
(Ctrl-z to undo) by dragging them from the Effects menu onto the clip
you want to apply them to in the Timeline. Use the playback to see the
effect.
Transitions
Again in the Effects menu, open the Video Transitions tab. Click
on View Video Transitions in the Edit Movie category. Add an effect of
type Dissolve to the beginning of the first clip. Select a transition
for each two clips in the sequence, then drag it and drop it in the
Timeline over the clip to apply to. Note that some of them can use a
single clip at a time or a little bit of both. Use the playback to
test the effects.
Still image
Click on Import pictures under Capture Video category and import
the Java image. Drag this image to the end of your Timeline. By
default this image will play for 5 seconds. Adjust its duration to
about 7 seconds by dragging the right border of the image in the
Timeline. Add a transition effect to it such as Iris Box and any other
effect you want.
Soundtrack
Make sure to cite the site properly in the credits, if
you use one.
Import the audio clip into the project. Double click on it to
open it in the editing area. Select a beginning for the section you
want to use and click on the { button to set it. Then drag it
to the Audio 2 track in the Timeline at the beginning. Adjust the end
of the audio clip to match the end of the whole movie.
You may need to zoom out (hold the Alt while
zooming).
If the clip is shorter than the movie, add it again and adjust it
to cover the duration of the movie.
It may be necessary to apply an audio transition filter
if you had to duplicate a short clip to avoid an abrupt change.
Adjustments
Click on the little arrow next to the name Audio 2 to show more
details for this track. Over the sound data you should see a label
Volume:Level. If it's not what it says, click on this label to select
Volume Level. Then you can drag down a yellow line you see over the
clip to adjust the volume of the clip.
The goal is to reduce the volume of the music enough to
be able to hear what the people are saying. You can adjust the size of
the display of this track to make it easier to edit the
volume. You can also adjust the volume of each of the video clips up to
hear the speech better.
Once you are happy with it, add a Crossfade effect (any of them)
to the beginning and the end of the track Audio 2 so that the music
starts and ends progressively.
Save your work (Ctrl-S).
Credits
From the Title menu choose New Title - Default Roll and give it
the name Credits. Write "With:" followed by the names of the people
in the clips you chose in order of appearance (see file names on
Canvas), then under "Editor:" place you own name, and then below add
"Soundtrack:" and then either freesoundtrackmusic.com if you chose the
Space Martini track, or Nine Inch Nails if you chose one of the Ghost
files. Set the text in a smaller font than the title and the color you
want. Align it either to the left or centered.
It doesn't matter if it gets out of the page on the
vertical, as long as it fits horizontally on the page.
Then select the entire text and from the Title menu click on
Roll/Crawl Options. Check both the Start Off Screen and the End Off
Screen options. Then set the Ease-in at 1 and the Ease-out at 4.
These are seconds based on a 5s total length of the
rolling clip.
After this you can close the credits editing window. You should
see it in the credits title in the Project space. Drag it to the
Timeline under Video 2 and align it on the right side with the still
Java image. This way the credits should be rolling over this
image.
c. Export movie
Save your project. From the File menu choose Export - Media. In
the Export Settings choose MPEG2 as the file type, then under the
presets choose NTSC DV High Quality. The file size should not be more
than 20Mb. An estimation of the file size should be shown at the
bottom. Change the output name and location to whatever you want, then
click Export. Go to the folder in Explorer and check that the file is
there. You can play it to check the result.
Upload to Canvas: in Homework 11, the resulting mpg
file. Let me know if the file size is too large to upload.