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Premiere Pro 2020 in-depth Look at Productions
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- čas přidán 16. 04. 2020
- This is an in-depth overview of the brand new Premiere Pro 2020 Productions panel. For collaborative workflows, this is going to be huge. Even if you are a solo editors, productions has many features that are extremely valuable for large projects.
Want to learn how to edit 10x faster in Premiere Pro? Join my online course here: bit.ly/premiereguru
Adobe PDF guide for Productions: adobe.ly/2XMxM1c
Another thing worth noting: I had disabled opening multiple projects in the past. So in productions, you'll need to enable that again if you've disabled it in the past.
Thanks for cramming so much value in so little time. So many other videos like this on CZcams are 4 minute intros and lots of rambling in between, and I feel like every second of this video was intentional and valuable.
Thanks!! Definitely wanted to put out something really well put together. I had similar thoughts as you whenever I watched videos about the topic.
Amazing a must feature! Going to create my 1st Production today. Keep it up Chris, awesome job!
Very well done and informative, Chris! Thanks! This feature has been long overdue.
Some good information in this video but a slight pause in the narration between edits would have made it a lot better
Good note, just a reminder to use CZcams's Playback Speed to 0.75 or 0.5. As a not native speaker, that helps me a lot and to focus on what Chris is saying and be able to follow instructions on the screen. Some of features I'm very familiar, so I then change playback speed to x1.25 or x1.5. That way I get to the point more relevant to me. ;)
Less than 2k subscribers and views? Some really solid stuff and great information. I'm glad this didn't get drowned in the CZcams search.
Adam Rickman thanks!! Appreciate the kind words :)
Great video! Found a lot of helpful tips and certainly cleared up how we can impliment this feature on our next project. Thanks!
This was so incredibly helpful. Thank you for taking all the time to make this video. which is extremely high quality btw ♥
Glad to be of help!
This was such a great video! I can't believe I have not known about this for years
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Excellent and detailed training. Subscribed.
Keep This style of video going Chris super informative and to the point. you'll get up there in view soon. I'm going to share your page on Full Time Filmmaker so everyone can check you out.!!!
This was such a great explanation. Subbed.
This is so helpful! Thank you so much!
Excellent tutorial, as always!
you explained it great. thx
For anyone interested, this is how Avid Media Composer has always worked. Avid and Premiere becoming more and more similar as time goes on.
I’m currently starting a new project that’s my first big Premiere gig, after working on Avid for about 10 years. Using this workflow, thinking of bins as “projects” is very weird to me. It seems a bit clunky, but hopefully this will make the switch from Avid to Premiere a bit easier.
wooow that was full on 😅Thank you for this video! just what I was looking for
Such an informative video Chris! I can't imagine that documentary project file(s). Already knee-deep in a giant project now that could have used this new feature.
Dude....you can't even imagine haha. That project was a nightmare towards the end. 😂
thanks for that!!
omg this is so cool
Brilliant
Thank you
Well done.
This seems like it could open some doors to new stock video editing workflows!
Hadn't even thought of that, but you are totally right. :)
Best productions explanation I found yet. Thank you!
Sorry for the lengthy comment, but let me know if you have any insight:
If I work with a brand and keep referencing the same assets over and over again. To avoid duplicates I have made a 12TB drive with the following structure:
- 1 Projects
- 2 Footage
- 3 Graphics
- 4 Audio
Should I create a production to manage all of those at all times, and essentially turn the Projects folder a subset of the production for this brand, how do you recommend that I relink existing ongoing projects?
Or should I take my lumps and start doing that from into the future?
Thanks again for the great info!
Fantastic walkthrough of Productions! I'm having trouble referencing nested sequences - when I drag them over from one project to my main timeline it just copies those sequences into the other project, nullifying the benefit of having separate projects. Thanks for any help!
So you are saying that it copies the entire sequence that had the nest in it? I’ve coooed nests between production sequences and it has worked as expected for me.
Hi! Your videos are amazing! Thanks for sharing! Can I work with proxy files on productions?
Sure can!
Nice explanation, Chris! This new feature is definitely Adobe's answer to how Avid has stability working with multiple editors and large projects. What's even better is that the public beta gives us sneak peek of what the engineer teams have coming next so we can help inform them of what will make the product better.
Thank you so much for this .. wow...
What about Replace with AE project ... and Render and Replace !
How does it handle these issues?
You can still use these just like you normally would. But you don't store the .aep files in the production folder where the .prproj files go. I would recommend having a separate folder for AE projects.
what if you are archiving a production? if i bring it back to a new drive at a later date will it be screwed up due to the displacement of the .prodset file
Any tips for using the "Reassociate Source Clips..." command? We've added a project to our Production which was created outside of the Production. It has source clips that are also present in another project in the Production. I'd like the new project's clips to be associated with our main footage project, but the "Reassociate Source Clips..." command doesn't seem to be doing anything.
Is it also possible to move sequences into other projects, without copying and just referencing them? This would be a real game changer for me.
Did you ever find a solution for this? I also agree that it would be very useful.
@@SpencerEvans Unfortunately not. I read in the support forum for Adobe that it's not possible.
Not sure if I understand the question. But perhaps this would work: 1. Select the sequence in your project bin. 2. Go to File/Export/Selection as Premiere Project. @@Sharivari
I have question if anyone can ans please..
I am solo editor... I just wonder is that "production" is helpful to load project faster? If yes then how explain please.
Example : i have 2 tb data ... I have to pc X and Y . On pc X i create regular project and pc Y i create production project. Then i import 2 tb data in both pc.
Than I close project. So now question if i open both project at same time so is there any different between opening? Or both take same time to opening? Or production project will open fast? Ans me...
Hi Chris, thanks for the video. It was very informative. I have a question. Every damn time Adobe Premiere updates, my project files require an additional _1 next to the name of the file. For instance, my project file Surfing.proj stays the same but the most current .proj file changes to to Surfing_1.proj and then Surfing_1_1.proj and so on. Am I the only person who this happens to? I don't understand it but that's not my question. My question is, if this happens, do I need to change the .proj file in the Production every time I update Premiere and the new project file is created? TIA
Are you opening individual project files and not your production? Generally speaking, every major update (premiere 22 to 23, to 24 etc) will require you to update the production. But that doesn’t add _1 to the individual files, just a new production folder.
The referencing only seems to work for media files. How do we create a reference to a sequence with graphics on it?
I would love to be able to setup a single timeline/sequence as my global intro and then reference it in multiple projects and only have to update it in one single place. Am I missing something?
That's exactly what I've been looking for the whole day long. Did you find a solution or good workaround?
Is Adobe Productions a good solution for a team of editors that are setup remotely? Are their collaborative features in Productions the same way there is in Teams? We all have remote based editors with NAS devices in their homes so its not physically shared networked storage but they all are in sync with one another. Will this still work?
There are ways to make productions work remotely, but it sounds like your team would be better off using Teams since that is setup for remote work.
Very helpful video mate, only thing I would suggest is to have a breather between sentences haha
Hold on a sec - do Productions ruin my current (organized) folder structure? I just want to use Productions to import the individual Project files that are already in nicely organized folders but it wants to Copy the project files into the new Production folder structure...
Can you make beginner tutorijal for premiere?
I teach a lot of the basics in my Premiere Pro course that you can find in the description.
I assume Project managing is still straight forward if the media is all over the user's computer?
Do you mean project manager?
But ideally you shouldn’t have your files scattered to begin with ;)
@@ChrisOlson2 Not exactly what I meant. I mean for when a project wraps and you want to archive everything and only consolidate the clips you used. In the way Productions work, looks like assets could be anywhere if the user isn't well organized. Thankfully I am :P
@@joelpowley1168 ah, yeah in that case it should work totally fine with productions.
Hey. This is not completely true. The import XML issue with duplication is still happening! I'm cutting a feature doc with over 300 hrs of material. We share edits regularly between the team. I was hoping that this would solve issues. But no. In order to test this most hated issue, I first set up a 'production' file. Second, I set up separate .pproj files as suggested, for SFX, Rushes, GFX, Music. Next, I set up a project just for sequences. I imported an XML of an edit into this project. Guess what, it dragged in a whole bunch of video files.
So I did the mandatory relink, then kept this project file in the 'production' thinking it may be just an XML import issue. I then set up a second 'sequences' project file in production. And using media browser, I imported this XML timeline. And guess what, it yet again, dragged its footage with it, like a ball and chain.
And no footage was ever relinked to the original rushes project set up at the beginning. Riddle me this...how do I get Adobe to listen, even if I am on their Beta list???
Good video work, man . Just hope someone oneday will fix this dupes issue with sharing. :)
Hey! This isn't a workflow I've used before, but if I am understanding this correctly, the entire issue is the XML. If you've imported an XML into one production project, you shouldn't be trying to import that same XML into ANOTHER sequence in the production. You should be copying the footage from the project panel into the next sequence. By doing an XML a second time, Premiere probably thinks you are wanting to have two versions of it.
So here is how I would understand to do this properly:
> Setup two .prproj files in a production. One for media one for sequences.
> import XML into the media .prproj file. This will import video files into that project.
> to bring those media files into the sequences .prproj file, open it and then drag the files from the media .prproj file into the sequences project timeline. Now all your media should stay only in the media project, but it will share the media between the sequences and media project.
Hopefully that helps. Again, not a workflow I've had to use but I think based on your description that it wasn't being used quite properly.
So a production is nesting for projects 😂✌️
Dude can you talk any faster?
Actually yes, considerably haha.
Slow down your narration! Try not to shorten your pauses between sentences. Your narration is way too fast!