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How to Use Adobe Premiere Pro 2021 for Beginners

337 Views     Jun 10, 2021

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Description

Adobe Premiere Pro is the leading editing software for Mac or PC.  It’s been around since 2003.  
If you don't have Adobe Pmreire, you can get the latest version or free trial here:
https://clk.tradedoubler.com/click?p(264355)a(2951326)g(22804962)url(https://www.adobe.com/products/premiere/free-trial-download.html)

In this video, I’ll show you the step-by-step process of editing a video using Adobe Premiere Pro.  

If you want to learn and master Premiere, check out my complete course where I show you everything Premiere has to offer.
https://www.sajadibs.com/ultimate-adobe-premiere-pro-course

1. Getting Adobe Premiere Pro
2. Creating a Project and organizing
3. Import media
4. Assembly - Bring footage to timeline
5. Change clip order
6. Trimming clips on a timeline
7. Split clips (Cut tool)
8. Adding cutaways or B-roll
9. Adding music
10. Changing audio levels
11. Fading audio 
12. Adding transitions
13. Adding video effects
14. Adding Text
15. Color correction
16. Export

Resources: (some of these are affiliate links)

You can get Adobe Premiere Pro here: 
https://clk.tradedoubler.com/click?p(264355)a(2951326)g(22804962)url(https://www.adobe.com/products/premiere/free-trial-download.html)

Sign up to get notified about the full Premiere course:
The Ultimate Adobe Premiere Pro Course is Coming Soon
https://www.sajadibs.com/ultimate-adobe-premiere-pro-course

This is the external hard drive I use:
https://amzn.to/3gmOuMy

Royalty-free music:
https://1.envato.market/NgYR2


Transcription

How to Use Adobe Premiere Pro 2021 for Beginners

Hey everyone. In today's video, I'm going to show you my favorite editing software of all time, Adobe, premier and I want to walk you through exactly how to get started all the way to finishing your first project in just one video. I am putting together a complete course on Adobe premier, cause there's a lot to learn, but in this half-hour, I'm hoping to teach you as much as possible in just one video.

If you're new to Adobe premiere is created by the company, Adobe, they make Photoshop and a ton of other songs, and the premiere has been around since 2003. I've been using it since 2010. And I went to film school and learn editing even before that. So I use it now every single day. So I thought I could make a video to show you exactly my workflow and some tips and tricks to make you a better editor.

So, first things first, if you don't have Adobe premier or the latest version of Adobe premiere, basically what Adobe did several years ago is they made this a subscription. So, you know, By the software with a one-time payment, you pay monthly. So I have a link and affiliate link with Adobe in the description below where you could get a seven-day free trial.

So you'll go ahead and start here and then you'll pay a monthly fee or if you want to be a full-blown editor, or if you use other programs like Photoshop and light. You could get this bundle package just basically comes with over 20 different desktop and mobile apps for one price. But this does also have a seven-day free trial.

So whichever direction you go, go ahead and choose that here. They do have business and student-teacher additions as well, but what's great about this is you always get the latest update, all the updates come to you all the time. So you always use the latest version. Back in the day, I bought a thousand-dollar version of this and it was quickly outdated.

So I don't mind paying the monthly price, especially if you. Use it to make videos that you going to monetize once you download any stolen, I'm just going to open up Adobe premiere pro here. That latest version that I have. So after you open up Adobe premiere here, it doesn't matter which version you're using.

You typically see this welcome screen here. And the first thing we want to do is we want to create a new project. You'll see that right here and you'll see that on the left side. So I'll go ahead and press that and walk you through recreating your first project. You'll see a screen that looks like this.

So I'll kind of walk you briefly through what you need to do here for beginners, but typically you start with naming your project. So this is Adobe premier tutorial. And then the location where this is saved, this is really important because I usually use external hard drives and basically what I do is from the time where I record something on a card or a phone, basically, I go from this camera to this card, I take this card out, put it on my computer to download and then I use one of these external hard drives. I'm using one right here for this project. So I definitely recommend the best thing I ever learned from it. Was organizing my project at this point. So I know this is boring before I show you editing, but if you get an external hard drive, you could really organize things and things will not fall apart later on.

I definitely recommend the organization process. Before you start editing, it'll save you a lot of headaches later. So I already created that. So I'm going to change my location to that external heart. So right here, I created a folder called Adobe pro I'm here already. So you could just press new fuller, a Mac or PC create one, and then the way I organize every project is I create four different folders. One is called footage, anything from my card or anything I shot with a camera is going to go in here, music, pictures. Sometimes I have graphics and then I have my project files, which is what I'm saving right now. So I always use an external hard drive.

You see it right, put everything into it, create four folders and then I go into projects and choose that and everything that I do with this project file is going to be nice and organized in there and every new file will be sorted out that way. You won't be all over the place on your computer and nothing is going to go offline later.

Okay, so those two things first, then everything else. I pretty much leave on recommended. Now, this depends. If you're using a desktop or a laptop and what kind of options you have, but go with the recommended, leave everything else. The same scratch disk goes to this tab and makes sure everything is set to your project too.

So you can see, I use a big, hard drive. I have three terabytes open out of five terabytes because video files are big. That's why you want to do it this way and in just settings, you don't have to worry about this is more advanced right now. So basically all you have to do is name your project. Choose your location, organize things, press okay, and when you open premiere, you most likely land on this tab right here that says learning. You'll see you have all these different tabs for different things. What I recommend you do is jump into default editing first. Let's go ahead and it's going to slightly change how the layout of your Adobe premiere will look.

So you see changed some of the windows for me. So in this section, let's look at bringing in the footage that we have, that we want to edit into this. Now, this could be footage, it could be pictures. It could be audio files, music, files, whatever is just called media. We'll bring it over here. It says import media to start.

So this box is where all your media is going to and then I'll show you the other boxes as we go through. So right now, all you have to worry about is that on top, you just landed on default editing. We'll cover some of these other tabs later and in here you will double click to import media. So just double-click this box, and then it's going to open your browser here on your PC, or like the finder here and I want to go back to my hard drive, my external hard drive, and I'm going to open up that same folder, right. That I used to say my project and I'm going to go to footage. What I did was I just transferred my footage from my camera to this folder. So I'm not using it from the card. Never gives it from the card because when you take out the card, the memory card, everything is going to be gone.

So transfer over to another folder on your computer or on an external hard drive, which is what I did, and then I'm going to select the whole folder. Sometimes, depending on what you import, you might get a pop-up just press. Okay, and it imports it. I imported the whole folder. Then what I do, I double click here again and I'll go back one step and I'll import this time, music and pictures too.

I could import, so I'll import it that, so that's the easiest way to import, or you could come to file and then there's an empty port option over here to down here where you could import or use the keyboard shortcut. I prefer to just double click or you could just grab something from a window like this.

I'm bringing it over here like this too. That's another way of dragging it or double-clicking it. Okay, so everything's here. So that's importing your media next. Let's go ahead and start editing. So let me show you the basic editing process, which is assembly. Assembly is just you selecting the best parts of any clip and then putting it down here.

So the way that works is I'm going to open my footage folder. I'm going to double click. So it should show me something like this. And in here I have all the footage, right. But usually the beginning of it, maybe the middle of it somewhere along the way is the part I want to keep. And the rest I want to throw away, right. Basic editing. So this is how simple and editing processes come to the very first clip here. You're just going to go through every clip and choose the best parts. So I'm going to double click on this clip. It's going to put it up here for you. If, anytime you want to make things bigger or smaller because you can't see all of these windows could be resized.

So I'm going to grab this and make it a little bit bigger so I could see what I'm looking at. Okay, you could do this with pretty much any window that you have. I have that open now and it's right here and what I could do is if I grabbed this blue thing here, I could go ahead and scrub. This is called scrubbing.

When you were just going through your shot, these are just some drone shots I took in Florida. So what I want to do is I want to decide where is my clip going to start and when is it going to end, instead of using the start and endpoint of this clip, I want to make my own remember this keyboard shortcut for beginners.

I don't recommend learning too many, but this one is essential. Select a start point. So I'm going to scrub right here and start here and press I, which stands for in, and look what it does when I press I, it makes this the new endpoint instead of the beginning. So that's your start point? Your new start point.

Yeah, and then I'll go where this ends maybe ride here and O stands for out. So I four in oh four out that creates a new start and a new end for my clip. Okay, so I have that clip now, before I show you the next part, let me explain this right here. He says drag media here to create a sequence, a sequence or sometimes referred to as timeline in any editing program is where all your editing is going to take place. So if I drag this from this box right here, I'm going to grab it and bring it down here and let go. My edit just began. So the first thing I did was a double click, added an in-point added an outpoint dragged it down here and it created my first sequence slash timeline.

You could refer to it whichever way you like, and since everything is taking place down here, your whole editor project, I'll take a second to explain to you what you're just looking at down here. V1. This stands for video one. That's your video track and underneath it is a one, which is your audio track.

This drone, the shot has no audio. So you won't see anything over here. Really? This is just a blank audio, basically a silent audio track that it's created with the video. I'll show you a different clip later that has video and audio together and we'll focus on audio in a bit right now. I'm just worried about the video.

So let me actually stretch this out. You could stretch out any of these tracks to kind of get a little bit of a preview of yours. Okay, so now that you've created a timeline, you still have your preview window here and you have what's called a program window here. This is going to be your final edit and where you can preview your edit, but let's not worry about this timeline.

We need to actually continue to assemble. We need to continue the assembly process. So what I do next is double click, the next clip, and then I go through it again. So here is maybe where I want to start. I'll put, I keep going. Well, let's put, oh, here. So I N O and then I could grab it and put it past this one, and it's going to snap to the previous clip.

Okay, and if it doesn't snap for you, there's this little magnet tool is called snap-in timeline. Make sure this is turned on because if you don't have a turn on, it's really hard to get them to connect. So when one clip ends, another one starts. Okay, so you definitely want to make sure that. Now, I'm just going to press minus here.

Cause if I press minus, I could shrink this down a little bit so I could get a better picture if I press plus zooms into it. So, and oppress minus up here is important because it will show you how long your edit is right now. The first clip ended here. So about five seconds, you could see that over here and if I keep going, it's about 30 seconds for that clip, right? So this clip is far too long. So maybe I'll trim it down shorter, but again, right now I don't worry about any of that. All I do is I go through all my clips, double click it, loaded up here, see which parts I like. Maybe I don't like any of this, so I'll leave it alone.

Let's go to the next one again. I'll go through it. This looks good. Let's press the endpoint here keep going O, and I'll drag it and put it over here. Now, another option you have besides dragging it is to insert and overwrite. So if you insert, it's going to appear right here. Can you see that?

I'm going to select this though and delete it and if you override, let me press override. It overrides on top of another clip. So sometimes that's useful. Really my preference is just dragging and dropping where I want the clip. So I'm going to undo that. So you could go to edit and undo. There's a keyboard shortcut for that.

That is very, very useful. So that's command Z or control Z on a PC and that's undead the last clip. Okay, so I just added another clip. So we have four clips to work within this part, I'm going to show you change the order of clips, right? Cause if you're going by order here and just adding clips to your timeline, maybe you'll change your mind.

Maybe you decide. That maybe this clip should be the first clip, which actually is a nicer clip than this clip, right. So maybe we want to make this the first clip. Well, how do we do that? Well, you could simply grab a clip and bring it anywhere. It's really easy. You could bring it at the end. You could bring it in the beginning.

Okay, let me just undo that to explain what happened there on do that two times, just with my keyboard, shortcut commands. If you just grab it and put it at the end, it creates an opening here at the gap. Okay, then, if you play the video, it's just going to show you a black scene right here. You typically don't want that.

So you want to close that gap, so you typically will bring the next one, bring it back and then bring the new one back. You don't want those openings here because you want the shots to continue. Well, we want to bring this in the beginning and we did that. If I grab it and put it right here, erased. What was there before?

That we don't want either. So I'm going to press command Z. What we need to do is we need to grab all of them. So I'm just highlighting everything and we could bring it over like this to create that opening and then I could de-select everything by just clicking in an empty section and then also like the last clip that I want to be the first one, bring it over here and then I could select everything else and close that gap. So this is a very beginner's guide and I typically use keyboard shortcuts to take care of that, but just when you're getting started, it's really easy to just highlight a couple of clips or one clip at a time and then move them wherever you want and then grabbing everything and closing gaps like this.

Okay, so that's why I wanted to show you the basics and here and another way to go about it is. If you select this clip and press delete, let's say you no longer want this clip. You press delete. It creates this gap. So let me undo that and I'll show you a really cool keyboard shortcut. You can select something and hold option or alt and then delete and that keyboard shortcut closes that gap for you. So it will go from this clip to this. Very very useful. Okay, next let's look at trimming a clip. 'cause sometimes you put a clip like this one and it's far too long. You want it to be shorter? Well, how do you make this clip? Shorter, super easy. If you want the ending to end a little sooner, you grabbed the end and you bring it.

If you want the beginning to start a little bit later, you grab the beginning and you bring it up, right? The same thing with closing these gaps, though, you do have to select this gap and press option or alt and delete that will close the gap or you could simply just grab it and close the gap this way and then you'll have to grab these and close that gap.

For the ending and now this is trimming our clip, a very basic style of trimming that I recommend for beginners before they start playing with more advanced things. Now, let's look at the splitting eclipse. Sometimes you want to split this clip. Maybe you want to keep this part here, but the second part you want it to go somewhere else, maybe at the end.

Well, right now I can't do that. If I grab it, the whole thing moves the whole and I don't want to go back here and start from scratch in that assembly section. So this tool right here looks like a razor blade. The keyboard shortcut for it is C because it stands for cuts. So if you select it, you could come in here and as long as this line is where you want the cut to happen. Like here, if you come down here, you could click any separates your clip to two different clips. Okay, you need to actually change your tool back to the arrow tool. This one is called a selection tool, keyboard V for the keyboard shortcut. Now, I could select the second part and move it to the end, right and then I could select these three clips like this and close that gap. So now we changed our edit where that one showed up at the end and again, you could change the order of clips anytime you want. For your story to make sense. Now, let me show you a clip that has audio. So I'll come back over here with all my clips are and I'll grab one of them and I'll bring this one entirely into my timeline, right?

So I didn't click this one loaded up here, press INFO. I just grabbed it from here, doula directly to here. So I skipped a step and here's the problem. When I grabbed from here to here, there's a bunch of stuff here that I don't need right before I start talking. So I need to cut that out. Well, we already know about the razor tool, so see, I'll get this blade.

I'll come and cut the beginning part out and I'll choose the arrow again and also like this and as long as I hold the option or all 10 press delete, it will close that gap for me, just like that. So now it makes sense. It's where I start. I'm going to press minus here to just make this smaller. So this is my clip of talking.

So now you could see the difference between clips to have no audio. You see, there's just a flat line. Sometimes they don't have anything. There's no audio track at all and when they do, they show what's called the audio waveform. Let me just make it bigger to show you. This is what they look like.

This is me talking. This is the audio waveform for it and I have it on mute right now. But if you look here, this is basically the volume of me talking over here and it's a pretty good volume, typically around this point where the green line comes up here. That's a good volume for talking so you can mix and match.

Typically on any project. I have me talk. Then I cut to a scene like this. That may be back to me talking, this is a typical editing project, and sometimes you want someone to talk, and then you want to show something while they're still talking. So how do we do that? Well, the easiest way to do it is I could just select a clip that I have.

Let's go ahead and load a clip up here. I'll double-click this clip. Let's just put I here and O, here, let's say I want to show this clip while I'm talking. Well, instead of grabbing it from here, I could just grab the video. So I'll grab a video from here and I could just grab this video track and put a right here on top of me talking.

Now, these are two different video tracks, right? There's video track two. This one is just the sunset here and then there's video track one, but since video tracking. That little clip is covering me is going to go from there, to there, back to me, but the audio is going to play the whole time. That's what's great about this kind of edit and these, when you edit like this, the second clip is called B roll.

I use B roll like this all the time. When you're telling a story, it's really great to just have someone kind of narrate underneath it this way. So this is either called a cutaway or adding a B roll to your video. Very very essential to editing. Once you get a little more advanced, let's say I'm done with the basic edit.

Then he comes adding music and fixing the audio and adding texts and transitions and things like that. So let's get into that now and the basics of it are this. If you want to add music, you basically put your music on a different audio track, than your regular audio tracks. So if you have already someone talking like right now, a.

Has something on it, right? This is an audio track. One is me talking. So music needs to go to audio track two. So let's go back to our folder. I'm going to press this up arrow to get out of this footage folder and then I'll see my music folder and double click that with music. You're going to get into copyright issues.

If you don't license music. Okay, it's really hard to just use any song, and especially if you put it on YouTube or work with clients, you have to like it. So I'll put a link to my favorite platform in vAuto here, where you could just play a song, and then you could just pay a monthly fee and use as much as you want.

You just press download here and that's what I did. I licensed it through this platform. Now, I could use it for anything, right. They're called royalty-free audio tracks. This platform right now has 73,000 to choose from and you could filter by any number of options. So I want to make sure you understand that before you just use any song on your video because it could lead to problems.

So then I brought it here just like I would with any footage and just like with any other footage, you could double click it, preview it up here, and put in an outpoint, or in this case, I want to use the whole track. So I'm just going to grab it from here and bring it to the audio track too and it looks like I missed the beginning, so I'm going to grab it and bring it to the beginning.

Now I snapped to the beginning. You can see, I could easily move it to track three, two, right? There's a bunch of tracks here. You could actually make more tracks any time by right-clicking and adding tracks or audio tracks or video tracks. It's really easy. Okay, so there's my music. I'm just, can I extend this out so you can see a little bit better, and now let's talk about audio levels and mixing your own.

So changing your audio levels. This is all you have to do. If I press play, you can't hear me because the music is really overwhelming, which is okay. If there is no one talking like in the beginning, this is good to let the music take over. But when someone is talking, you'll have to lower the music. This is how you do it.

You just come with your mouse right on this line, grab the line right here negative 28. Okay, I'll let go and it's perfect. This is basically the audio level that I know based on experience where it needs to be, but it depends from song to song right now. If I wanted to raise an audio level like me talking, I could grab that line and go up to right and how do you know it's perfect. Well, you can listen to it. Perfect video and you could also look at that line, right? As long as it's not hitting this red part is probably a good mix. So that's just a very, very basics of audio editing because there's literally if you come up here and press audio, a whole audio mixing panel here with all kinds of sound effects and sound essential is your dialogue, mixes music so much to cover that this could be its own course, but just for basics, typically, if you use background music, just make sure if someone's talking to bring the volume down.

So it mixes correctly with the audio and if someone's talking and it's low, just make sure you bring it up here. So it falls between negative six and negative 12 on this bar. Now, look at the song here is far too long, right? My edit ended here, but the song is green keeps going. So I'll have to use the Blake tool, come down here and cut right here, right, right. Where he ends and then presses the selection tool and selects the rest and press delete. So now my audio and video and at the same time now I want to show you how to fade things in and out. Okay, so typically with audio, especially that you want it to smooth out, you don't want it to just abruptly end.

So if I click here and right-click there's this thing called applied default transition, and you could do this to video too. So I'll apply default transition and let me show you how this is going to end now hire editing workflow using. Okay, so this fades to black with the audio or with video and with audio, if fades it up any time, let me press the plus sign to make it bigger with the cross dissolve or this constant power fade here, you could make it longer too.

So you could grab these transitions and make them longer. So this is fading, audio or video in or out. You could do this in the beginning, too. Any phase from black or a slowly fades up. So you can do the same thing. So now let's get into adding transitions. Transitions are what happens between two clips.

So right now, if I press play with space bar, okay, this is called a cut. The transition is just a cut. There's no transition besides that. This is typically what you see in movies, right? They're just cut from one shot to another, but sometimes you want to maybe do a nice fade or something else. So let me introduce you to the effects library.

So in this box right here, there is this thing called effects and this has all kinds of stuff. It has stuff that I've bought for it. Outside of premier, he has default audio tracks. It has video effects and video transitions, right now let's open up video transitions. I'll show you the basics here under dissolve.

Cross dissolve is the most common. It's the default one. So if you grab it from here and put it in between two clips like this, and I'll go here and press space. That's a cross dissolve. Right? Very handy. Probably the most common one you'll use. Then you have dipped to black. It's very cool. Let me show you that it goes to black and comes back from black, a very handy transition too.

Then you have something called a film dissolve, which I really like. Let me show you that. So it's kind of a cross dissolve, but it's a little bit of a different style and then there's more that you could play around with to see some of these are very, very cheesy a page pill. I don't recommend it, but this is what it looks like, right? Very nineties. So you get the idea. You could get a ton of different transitions from this box. So I wanted to introduce you to that and while we're here, I'll show you video effects too. So video effects are not what goes between two clips. It's what goes on top of a cliff to make it a little bit different.

So just to show you a very basic one, I'll show you image control here. You could change something to blackout. If I just drop it, just like that, he changed the black and white, but these are facts that have a ton of settings. So if I click this right here and come on top, there's that effects control. So all your effects have their own control and those are the control for the one I just applied black and white.

Let me select this and actually delete it. I'll show you a different one as well. So let me show you lens distortion. Let's drop this on top of this clip. You could see all these settings. So let me change the curvature. You could see, I could get this kind of effect out of that filter here. Now, I rarely use video effects like this.

I use maybe a handful of them, but I just want it to show you video transitions and video effects. But as for more advanced editing right now, you could stick to the base. But adding text is one of my favorite things with Adobe. Premier, let me show you how it works because it's really, really easy. All you have to do is press T right here on your keyboard to its just T for text tool, and then you could click anywhere on the top of your video and I could just type text. Okay, let me actually call this Florida sunset. Okay, so this is the text and as you could see on video track three, randomly, it just created that text effect and I could treat this just like any other video file, right. I could actually cut it, shrink it down or make it longer, super, super easy.

So maybe I'll actually use the blade tool and end it at the end of this clip. I'll use the selection tool and delete it. So now it's just on top of this one clip and let me select it and you could see if it comes through effects control, you have a bunch of options with a two. So if I expand it, you could see, I could change everything about it here.

So it's too small, right? So I'm going to select it here and what I want to do is make it bigger. So that's the size slider here. So I'll just make it like this big, let's go with that. You could also move where it's at. Okay, so you could change it. That's on there. Vector motion. I could open this and I could work with these lighters, right. Move it up and down. Let's put it in the middle here and I could change the fonts, right. So I could change the font to something bold like this and resize it if I want to. Okay, and you have a bunch of options. This is just like any other text editor here and you could change the color, right? So you could select this and let's say we want to make it yellow.

Okay, something like that. That doesn't look good. I'll stick with the white press. Okay, so this is how easy it is to add text, and just like with anything I could click on in the beginning I'll right-click and add a transition, and at the end to add a transition. So now it will look like that will come in and it'll fade out.

That's heading text in the simplest form. But if you go to the graphics tab up here, there is a whole world of texts with all kinds of stuff that I've bought from him. Bottle elements, like really high-end motion graphics that you could easily grab, and then add his texts like this too. So these kinds of texts are already pre-animated.

You could click on any of them and then edit them on this site. This is the graphics panel, which I'm not covering here, but just wanted to bring her to your attention for basic texts. You just use T which is this tool right here and it will let you do it. I'll go back to default editing. Now, before we actually get this out of premiere and ready to post let's look at color correction, which I won't get into that much, but I wanted to show you just a quick glimpse into color correction.

When I choose this clip. You could go to this tab called color. Okay, if I go to this tab called color, you get this whole world of color correction that you could work with and each of these has different boxes. So let me actually close them. So you have basic color correction, creative curves, vignettes, all kinds of stuff.

Typically, if you click on basic color correction, these are the useful stuff. If a clip is too dark, you can make it work. If it's too bright, you can make it darker. That's your adjustment for exposure contrast, you could make the blacks less noticeable or more noticeable highlights. The same thing as exposure, just affecting highlights.

Same with shadows. Just affecting shit. And you can make your blacks more black. So these are really advanced and simple. At the same time as saturation, you could really make things more colorful or less colorful, like black and white. These are useful color temperatures. You can make things warmer or cooler and you could change the tint of things, which I hardly do.

But do some creative effects here. Okay, this is the very basics of basic color correction, but I wanted to show you what's possible with Adobe premiere pro, but this again could be its own course and I'll cover that more in my in-depth course on Adobe premiere. Now, let's go ahead and export or a project.

Let's say we're done with this project. Typically what I do is I come at the end of my project. Okay, I'll just come right here at the end with this and what I do is I'll just press. So that's an outpoint, but this time you're not doing it to a clip, you're doing it to your whole video. So with this, I make sure I start from the beginning and end exactly where I want.

If I have extra stuff here, you won't worry about exporting that now to export or get this out of the premiere. Go to file. Go to export and choose media because I want to take a second to explain this panel. Okay, the most common format is going to be. For encoding so I always recommend people choose this.

If they have no idea what they're looking at here, it's almost always going to work out for you in just about every situation than for preset. If you know where you're going with this, it makes it easy. If you're going to YouTube, there's that YouTube version, 10 ADP you've shot at 4k. There's a 4k version of that.

If you're going to Vimeo, same thing, Twitter. If you have no idea where you're going. I still like the YouTube 1080p is the option I use almost every time unless I need the 4k version of that video. Then I'll put my name, I click this, and remember our project files. It just automatically is going to put it here.

So I could rename this to version one. Sunset and save it to exactly the folder I already created on my external hard drive. I'll press save. Then depending on the options you choose, it's going to let you do a lot more advanced stuff here. Now, for beginners, I recommend you touch none of it because this preset already dialed all these numbers in for you on their audio and video.

Everything is done. So you don't have to do anything really. You just need to know your format. This is going to make it MP4 each 264 video, which is the most default video and it has been for like five years. Set it like that don't worry about anything else, set your output name. So it knows where it's going to go.

Make sure if you have audio and video, they're both selected and just press export. That's it and depending on the speed and the length of your video, this may take seconds, or it may take hours depending on the size. Now, if I go to this version right here, it's actually exporting right here. So as soon as this is done, I'll show you this clip and there it is. I got this that says video export is successfully it's in my hard drive and just press the space bar here. And there's that video, right? Based on my editing. I mean, it's just kind of mishmash up. But you got the idea of the different types of clips you could work with and this is ready now to be posted anywhere you could post it on YouTube.

You could post it on Google Drive and send a link to a client. For example, if you're doing client work, I use Vimeo a lot for us to sending things to and that's a crash course to using Adobe premier, the most powerful editing software out there and I know we covered a whole bunch of stuff. That's why I'm putting together a very complete course where I really take my time to walk you through all of these in much more depth and show you a ton of things that we didn't get a chance to cover.

So if you want to learn more about Adobe premiere really master it, I mean, I've been editing professionally. 15 years. And for a decade at a, our premiere has been my favorite software. So I'll put a link in the description to that. All the other resources we talked about. Royalty-free music, free link to Adobe premier and I really hope if you want to take your editing to the next level that you choose that Adobe premier, although I do cover all kinds of editing softwares on this platform and this channel. So make sure you check those out to learn more about what's out there. Thanks so much for all your time. I really hope you found this useful shared with anybody else that you think may take advantage of and benefit from learning Adobe premiere, and I will see you next time.

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