I am the worst at keeping my media files organized. This is definitely a game changer! I was always confused about what sequences were and how to use them.This was a great simple explanation, thanks for sharing!
This is SO helpful for a newb like myself. I've been trying to find a video explaining how Sequences work within a Project, and all I've been finding are beginner videos explaining EVERYTHING ELSE BUT. Love that you explained a few different ways to use them. Mainly, for me, creating separate sequences for different scenes and bringing them together into one. This is relevant even for it being from 6 years ago at this point. 🙏😭🤩
I was looking for the last information (how to assemble multiple scenes - that you explained that it is putting all sequences in another sequence). But the whole tutorial was extremely useful! Thank you!
Same. I was wondering about the last step as well. Because each sequence can have different setting, what happens when you mesh all of them together? Would you need to go in and tweak all your clips afterwards?
I was really confused about sequences before I watched this video, thank you so much for the very clear, detailed information. You made it very easy to understand.
Yes! This was the video I was looking for. I used to go to Sequence on the top bar to create e new sequence, and it would come up with all these sorts of settings I don't quite understand yet, like DV 24p, DSLR 24p, etc. But thank you this is helpful for me with creating different versions of my edits.
Had to pause watching this so I could figure out why my MacBook Pro's battery was down to 38%, and it wasn't being charged despite being plugged into power. Thirty seconds of fiddling later I realized my battery was fine. I was watching your video full screen, and so I was looking at _your_ battery, not mine! 😂
I'm taking your course and I was struggling with my understanding of sequences and this cleared it up for me. Thank you, and I want to commend you on being an excellent teacher and I am taking a couple of your courses, and sure I will take more in the future. Just so you will know, I am a prison minister, and attempting to create videos for the purpose of promoting the ministry so other people will join in and help... thanks again.
Hey Phil, thanks for the video. I have a really simple question, in regards to how you mentioned the third way to use sequences. Ie, for multiple scenes in a narrative film. How do you merge the sequences at the end please? Regards, Dean
Hah! As a Photoshop user from almost the beginning (and just recently getting into movie editing) this video demystified a lot of things. (What the heck is a sequence?!?) Further, I'm about to start a more ambitious project, and your tutorial on using the timeline for sections is an absolute lifesaver. This is the perfect video for what I was looking for...and more. ...Well explained for us newbees.
Serioudly! this was like: Bingo. I am returning to Pr after years with still photography and Ps and I'm not feeling the "motor memory" aiw. I've been wrestling with concepts I once understood but have forgotten. This was like a blower that cleared a thin fog! Thanks
YES, you can combine these sequences. You just create the individual sequences as he shows at timestamp 2:30. You create the new sequence by 1- importing or selecting the footage and 2 - dragging that footage to the NEW ITEM folder below. Now you will see two sequences as noted by the Green colored sequence boxes. You can just drag and drop sequence #2 to at the end of sequence #1 to create a seamless movie with multiple sequences. I'm new to CZcams, and creating a channel called At The Tasting Room. Hope this helped.
Every single person was talking about the settings of a sequence but I could not get the logic why there are multiple sequences so you have explained that well. Thank you so much.
Thank you very much for making this extra informative and talking about the different purposes of sequences based on work style. I'm not using a high performance system, and as a newbie have put everything into one sequence, with the goal of rendering many episodes from that. And now it's so long that it's like walking through treacle! So I copied a segment to another sequence, and kept the original one open so I wouldn't lose it. But seeing that I can use a panel of sequences on the left, there must be a way to save the master sequence so I can close it and have better performance.
Phil is the only Instructor that Teaches the way I want to learn. Professional Courses, Clear Voice & Instructions, Covers Every Topic, Teaches The Best! He is Great! Normally, I don't do comments on CZcams Videos but He Made Me Do This! He is Awesome!
This tutorial is very helpful for understanding the basic uses of "sequences." I was looking for a tutorial for exporting in one video file from a multiple sequence. But you mentioned, we have to assemble all the sequences in another or new sequence in a proj file. Thank you for this.
This is what I needed thank you. I’m still running into an issue adding new media to existing sequences. I’m working on a Mac and feel like I’m not “grabbing” media correctly to drag from source to sequence.
I think most people start out making one big timeline, and then it gets messy, so THEN they start wanting to break it down into shorter sequences. Kinda the opposite of the workflows you mentioned, and it would be helpful to learn how to do that. But I'm just making an insurance inventory video, so I will make a sequence for each room. You saved me from making an entire new video for each room, which was my original plan. :-)
thank you, I would find this video better if you described how to open and close sequences once you fully close out of premier and how to make sure separate sequences do not get lost or confusing to find for future reference. Other than that thanks for the tutorial it was informative
update: i’ve now found out that if you were wondering about editing in sequences and them getting lost would be a problem for you as-well, i’ve come to find that it’s a lot easier than you might expect it to be. it works just as you’d expect if life was a simple world. goodluck to everyone making content!
Really helpful video.....in fact I was looking for it.... premiere Pro or FCP or any software......managing files and put them in a systematic manner in timeline and classifying them is very important......otherwise in the middle any editor can go blind/ clueless.........
This video was definitely helpful. I got what sequences were but as a newbie I didn't quite understand why they were necessary, so this definitely provided context and I believe will help me avoid pitfalls in the future.
QUESTION FOR YOU: Say you created 3 Sequences, and now you want your final movie to seamlessly blend all of them. How do you get Sequence 1 to seamlessly blend into Sequence 2, and 2 into 3? BTW, great tutorial!
This is my exact question. I am, indeed, trying to cut together multiple scenes (sequences) into one master sequence. I can put sequences into the master, but the IN/OUT points don't get respected by Premiere.
Thank you, thank you! This was a great 10-minute session on sequences. It addressed exactly what I need. I'm putting together a wedding video, and have broken it down into seven segments (bride prep, groom prep, ceremony, and such). Using your tips, I created a sequence for each of those seven segments, and within each, rough/fine/final cut sequences. Excellent!
@@VideoSchoolOnline Is There Any Premiere Experienced User that could help me out if a problem that I couldn't find the solution anywhere? It doesn't seem to be a bug, but is definitely a super weird behavior. The problem is Shown in this very short 3 min video: Insert Project Sequence in Another Sequence Project Timeline - Adobe Premiere - Help - Problem czcams.com/video/-9BT_KSWfGU/video.html Any help would be extremely appreciated
Thanks so much! This was super helpful. I was just highlighting ALL my content in Adobe Pr and then dragging it all just so I can add in a new video. This makes life so much easier :)
Video helped. I was confused about sequences and now I understand better. I will now investigate how to put together multiple sequences into one long sequence at the end when getting ready to export.
Hey Phil, Thanks. Very helpful. What I would like to see is you entire setup on how you handle files. Not only in Premeire Pro but also on your hard drive. You have many courses and many versions of courses with additional materials added on later, for example, the update you made to the Premiere course when 2017 came out. How in the world do you keep track of files without going mad? It would be great if you could add a section in the premiere course that shows how you organize files from beginning to end, including how you keep track of updates to courses.
I organised my folders inside the app and found that my whole video had got totally chaotic. There were black bands covering up my work and there appeared to be clips all over the place where I hadn't put them. Eventually I realised that the app was really struggling to keep up. It was taking several seconds to load each asset and even longer for them to disappear afterwards. I was worried about saving and quitting in case I was saving all the black bands - but eventually I took a deep breath and did it. I restarted my computer and disconnected my iPad Pro from Sidecar. When I restarted everything was fine again. What a relief!
Thank you so much for making this video. It makes total sense now. I wanted to know how to use sequences, but no videos had talked about it so clearly. I appreciated. ❤
Really good video with great examples on the different ways people use sequences that in itself gave me some ideas, then you got to the bit I was looking for at the end talking about long projects being spit into smaller parts, in my head kind of like chapters of a book, but here where is where I needed some help and an example would have been really useful. I'm about 6 months into premier pro and have literally been putting together a video/sequence a bit like typing a story into word, I now find myself with a 35 minute timeline with 15 layers of video/titles in places and 3 layers of sound and PP is lagging. I have improved things by using Mark in and Mark out and forcing PP to render sections but I'm at a point where I really need to split a massive sequence into sub sequences and I cant seem to find a decent example of how to do this - I'm guessing there must be some fellow newbies out there with a similar story. But great video, I got massive value so thank you for creating and sharing!
Great video. So far I've watched three different you tube videos on creating sequences and each one was ENTIRELY different with completely different approaches. One guy said, just drag your clip (with the characteristics you want) into the timeline and click yes to the pop up screen that says you want to change the sequence to match the qualities of the clip you've dragged in. That was it. (3 min) The second one I watched said open up the sequence screen and he showed us how to make a custom preset that you go back to every time. (5 min) You never mentioned any of setting stuff but still your video was very helpful to help me understand why you'd have single or multiple sequences. (10 min) I only left this message because you very nicely asked for it and what I want to tell you, is that even though each video was completely different in it's approaches (each very helpful) basically all the titles looked the same. I just searched on creating sequences in premiere All were helpful!
This is NOT what I was looking for! But I dont know if the new premiere still has the ability to put the previous sequence edit in one layer and then add more clips when making a new one. It just takes the whole edit in many layers onto the next one which was never there in the previous version and it sucks, if I'm correct!
Extremely useful, thank you. Not gonna lie, the biggest thing for me was learning how to rename sequences. I simply drag items in to make new sequences, which assigns a name based on one of the clips. I thought I was just gonna have to live with that! I suppose more broadly, putting together the fact that sequences themselves are media items that can be dragged in is what set the light bulb off. Thanks again!
You requested feedback... Great video - thanks. Done loads of editing in the past, but this is my first encounter with Premiere Pro, so sequences were new to me. Great demo and more importantly you provided a set of valid use cases where they are useful. Even my rinky-dink editing will benefit massively from them. Thanks
I was looking for this info, the presentation was a bit different from what I was specifically searching, but definitely helped me in opening up my own thoughts to see how I can use sequence to solve my problems. So yeah it covers a lot and it works
After messing around with things, I saw what I needed was to "Nest Sequence". For example, one scene contains 4 cameras all shown in a single scene like a grid format. After cutting each scene to align with one another, I wanted to nest each sequence to go on with the edits because I was done cutting the original 1hr clips to 10 minute with different cameras all aligned. Your tutorial helped basically
I'm new to Adobe premiere and was looking for some clarity on how to use sequences. One thing I'd like to know is how you save sequence settings and then use them for future projects?
This is great. I am looking for the difference between a clip and a sequence and not getting them confused with each other before rendering and ending up with a video within a video.
it's 2024 and this video is exactly what I was looking for. Thank you
I am the worst at keeping my media files organized. This is definitely a game changer! I was always confused about what sequences were and how to use them.This was a great simple explanation, thanks for sharing!
This is SO helpful for a newb like myself. I've been trying to find a video explaining how Sequences work within a Project, and all I've been finding are beginner videos explaining EVERYTHING ELSE BUT. Love that you explained a few different ways to use them. Mainly, for me, creating separate sequences for different scenes and bringing them together into one. This is relevant even for it being from 6 years ago at this point. 🙏😭🤩
I was looking for the last information (how to assemble multiple scenes - that you explained that it is putting all sequences in another sequence). But the whole tutorial was extremely useful! Thank you!
Same. I was wondering about the last step as well. Because each sequence can have different setting, what happens when you mesh all of them together? Would you need to go in and tweak all your clips afterwards?
Me too. Did you find one?
I really learnt alot from this video, i have been editing for 3years now, but looks like i have been a newbie before watching this, Thanks Phil
Thank you! Always helpful to hear and see how different people use a program, especially as a beginner. This was great.
great info thank you but
how do you put together the sequences at the end?
Exactly the last part wasn't finished jet.
I was really confused about sequences before I watched this video, thank you so much for the very clear, detailed information. You made it very easy to understand.
Glad you got it because I didn't. So he creates a new sequence but where is it, I just see the first sequence on the time line. I do not get it
Yes! This was the video I was looking for. I used to go to Sequence on the top bar to create e new sequence, and it would come up with all these sorts of settings I don't quite understand yet, like DV 24p, DSLR 24p, etc. But thank you this is helpful for me with creating different versions of my edits.
Had to pause watching this so I could figure out why my MacBook Pro's battery was down to 38%, and it wasn't being charged despite being plugged into power. Thirty seconds of fiddling later I realized my battery was fine. I was watching your video full screen, and so I was looking at _your_ battery, not mine! 😂
I'm taking your course and I was struggling with my understanding of sequences and this cleared it up for me. Thank you, and I want to commend you on being an excellent teacher and I am taking a couple of your courses, and sure I will take more in the future. Just so you will know, I am a prison minister, and attempting to create videos for the purpose of promoting the ministry so other people will join in and help... thanks again.
Hey Phil, thanks for the video. I have a really simple question, in regards to how you mentioned the third way to use sequences. Ie, for multiple scenes in a narrative film. How do you merge the sequences at the end please?
Regards,
Dean
Excellent and clear. I've edited in Premiere for more than a decade but never used multiple sequences.
It would have been cool to know how to add the multiple sequences in 1 master Sequence.
yeah!
Hah! As a Photoshop user from almost the beginning (and just recently getting into movie editing) this video demystified a lot of things. (What the heck is a sequence?!?) Further, I'm about to start a more ambitious project, and your tutorial on using the timeline for sections is an absolute lifesaver. This is the perfect video for what I was looking for...and more. ...Well explained for us newbees.
Serioudly! this was like: Bingo. I am returning to Pr after years with still photography and Ps and I'm not feeling the "motor memory" aiw. I've been wrestling with concepts I once understood but have forgotten. This was like a blower that cleared a thin fog! Thanks
Thank you bro you're awesome for breaking this down. I'm a total newb and I was stressed trying to understand what the heck a sequence was.
Thank you! I was looking for how to organize a project for a 1hr or longer video. You helped by explaining that scenario. Again, thank you! :)
YES, you can combine these sequences. You just create the individual sequences as he shows at timestamp 2:30. You create the new sequence by 1- importing or selecting the footage and 2 - dragging that footage to the NEW ITEM folder below. Now you will see two sequences as noted by the Green colored sequence boxes. You can just drag and drop sequence #2 to at the end of sequence #1 to create a seamless movie with multiple sequences. I'm new to CZcams, and creating a channel called At The Tasting Room. Hope this helped.
this video was The video i am looking for because i'm confused on multiple timelines. Thank you for this. form philippines
Every single person was talking about the settings of a sequence but I could not get the logic why there are multiple sequences so you have explained that well. Thank you so much.
Your video is very precise and Premiere creates sequences in a very confusing way. Thanks, you helped!
Thank you very much for making this extra informative and talking about the different purposes of sequences based on work style. I'm not using a high performance system, and as a newbie have put everything into one sequence, with the goal of rendering many episodes from that. And now it's so long that it's like walking through treacle! So I copied a segment to another sequence, and kept the original one open so I wouldn't lose it. But seeing that I can use a panel of sequences on the left, there must be a way to save the master sequence so I can close it and have better performance.
Thank you for your explanation. Me as newbie in Premiere Pro can easily understand. This is what I'm looking for.
Thank you for this video. Every time I listened to someone explain sequences it still confused me. This video made it click 💡
Thank you! I just start learning premiere pro and this video is super helpful! have a great day!
Wish I'd seen this before spending the last 4 months working on my CZcams series! Looking forward to using this for the next one, thank you.
Thank you - really helped!!! There's so much to know and I really appreciate straightforward explanations like yours.
I liked your way of telling the differences in how people use sequences!
Phil is the only Instructor that Teaches the way I want to learn. Professional Courses, Clear Voice & Instructions, Covers Every Topic, Teaches The Best! He is Great!
Normally, I don't do comments on CZcams Videos but He Made Me Do This!
He is Awesome!
+Rahat Hameed thanks so much!!!
This tutorial is very helpful for understanding the basic uses of "sequences." I was looking for a tutorial for exporting in one video file from a multiple sequence.
But you mentioned, we have to assemble all the sequences in another or new sequence in a proj file. Thank you for this.
thank you its what i need to know about sequences
Finally I found what I am looking for, thank you so much Bro! 👍👍👍
Very informative! Using sequences will definitely be added to my future works. Thank you@
this is exactly what I'm searching for! thanks a lot!
This is what I needed thank you. I’m still running into an issue adding new media to existing sequences. I’m working on a Mac and feel like I’m not “grabbing” media correctly to drag from source to sequence.
Thank You! I never understood the purpose of sequences. It helped!
Thank you for the sub-sequence breakdown. This video alone has saved countless hours for my projects. Much appreciated.
This really what i am looking for, vary clear and good explaination.
I think most people start out making one big timeline, and then it gets messy, so THEN they start wanting to break it down into shorter sequences. Kinda the opposite of the workflows you mentioned, and it would be helpful to learn how to do that. But I'm just making an insurance inventory video, so I will make a sequence for each room. You saved me from making an entire new video for each room, which was my original plan. :-)
Great video. This is was definitely helpful since I'm just getting used to using Adobe Premiere Pro for my channel.
THANK YOU FOR EXPLAINING THINGS SO THOROUGHLY
thank you, I would find this video better if you described how to open and close sequences once you fully close out of premier and how to make sure separate sequences do not get lost or confusing to find for future reference. Other than that thanks for the tutorial it was informative
update: i’ve now found out that if you were wondering about editing in sequences and them getting lost would be a problem for you as-well, i’ve come to find that it’s a lot easier than you might expect it to be. it works just as you’d expect if life was a simple world. goodluck to everyone making content!
Really helpful video.....in fact I was looking for it.... premiere Pro or FCP or any software......managing files and put them in a systematic manner in timeline and classifying them is very important......otherwise in the middle any editor can go blind/ clueless.........
Love to be helpful! Thanks for watching
Thank you for sharing. I was struggling to edit my son's birthday video. You made my day.
Wonderful. Just as advertised. Thank you
Most helpful video I’ve seen on this. Thanks!
Absolutely, the video I was looking for, thanks so much!
This video was definitely helpful. I got what sequences were but as a newbie I didn't quite understand why they were necessary, so this definitely provided context and I believe will help me avoid pitfalls in the future.
QUESTION FOR YOU: Say you created 3 Sequences, and now you want your final movie to seamlessly blend all of them. How do you get Sequence 1 to seamlessly blend into Sequence 2, and 2 into 3? BTW, great tutorial!
This is my exact question. I am, indeed, trying to cut together multiple scenes (sequences) into one master sequence. I can put sequences into the master, but the IN/OUT points don't get respected by Premiere.
@@tomsteger1 Still no answer to the question?
EXACTLY what I needed. Thanks man!
Great video Phil Ive grown in knowledge with premiere pro due to your courses, u answered my question and glad it was you.
I am very new to Premiere Pro and this was vey helpful.
Thank you, thank you! This was a great 10-minute session on sequences. It addressed exactly what I need. I'm putting together a wedding video, and have broken it down into seven segments (bride prep, groom prep, ceremony, and such). Using your tips, I created a sequence for each of those seven segments, and within each, rough/fine/final cut sequences. Excellent!
I’m so glad to have helped!
@@VideoSchoolOnline Is There Any Premiere Experienced User that could help me out if a problem that I couldn't find the solution anywhere?
It doesn't seem to be a bug, but is definitely a super weird behavior.
The problem is Shown in this very short 3 min video:
Insert Project Sequence in Another Sequence Project Timeline - Adobe Premiere - Help - Problem
czcams.com/video/-9BT_KSWfGU/video.html
Any help would be extremely appreciated
Thank you for explaining that so well!!
Thanks for this video. I am def a noob to video editing and this helped tremendously.
Thanks so much! This was super helpful. I was just highlighting ALL my content in Adobe Pr and then dragging it all just so I can add in a new video. This makes life so much easier :)
Video helped. I was confused about sequences and now I understand better. I will now investigate how to put together multiple sequences into one long sequence at the end when getting ready to export.
I just switched from FCPX to PP and this was super super helpful, thank you!
Hey Phil, Thanks. Very helpful. What I would like to see is you entire setup on how you handle files. Not only in Premeire Pro but also on your hard drive. You have many courses and many versions of courses with additional materials added on later, for example, the update you made to the Premiere course when 2017 came out. How in the world do you keep track of files without going mad? It would be great if you could add a section in the premiere course that shows how you organize files from beginning to end, including how you keep track of updates to courses.
I organised my folders inside the app and found that my whole video had got totally chaotic. There were black bands covering up my work and there appeared to be clips all over the place where I hadn't put them. Eventually I realised that the app was really struggling to keep up. It was taking several seconds to load each asset and even longer for them to disappear afterwards. I was worried about saving and quitting in case I was saving all the black bands - but eventually I took a deep breath and did it. I restarted my computer and disconnected my iPad Pro from Sidecar. When I restarted everything was fine again. What a relief!
This was extremely helpful! Thank you.
I was looking for combining seguinces for your final cut. Or edit. Combining multiple sequences. Thanks always good to go over anything
Phil, this is the video I was looking for!!!! I finally got it:) Thx.
This was what I was looking for, thank you!!
Bro you really cleared that up for me, I used to be so confused on the concept of sequences.
Very good explanation, and organizing ideas! Thanks!
Thank you so much for making this video. It makes total sense now. I wanted to know how to use sequences, but no videos had talked about it so clearly. I appreciated. ❤
Thank you so much, Phil. Really helpful video
Really good video with great examples on the different ways people use sequences that in itself gave me some ideas, then you got to the bit I was looking for at the end talking about long projects being spit into smaller parts, in my head kind of like chapters of a book, but here where is where I needed some help and an example would have been really useful. I'm about 6 months into premier pro and have literally been putting together a video/sequence a bit like typing a story into word, I now find myself with a 35 minute timeline with 15 layers of video/titles in places and 3 layers of sound and PP is lagging. I have improved things by using Mark in and Mark out and forcing PP to render sections but I'm at a point where I really need to split a massive sequence into sub sequences and I cant seem to find a decent example of how to do this - I'm guessing there must be some fellow newbies out there with a similar story. But great video, I got massive value so thank you for creating and sharing!
Excellent video. Thanks so much.
Thank you for this tutorial
Useful to get a quick idea of how to create and use multiple sequences in one project, thanks.
This video answered my questions. Thanks.
Extremely helpful! Thank you very much for this kind of information. ❤❤❤👍👍👍👏👏
This was super helpful but I was looking for a video on how to link seperate clips into one sequence.
Cheers for this. Very well explained
Great video. So far I've watched three different you tube videos on creating sequences and each one was ENTIRELY different with completely different approaches. One guy said, just drag your clip (with the characteristics you want) into the timeline and click yes to the pop up screen that says you want to change the sequence to match the qualities of the clip you've dragged in. That was it. (3 min) The second one I watched said open up the sequence screen and he showed us how to make a custom preset that you go back to every time. (5 min) You never mentioned any of setting stuff but still your video was very helpful to help me understand why you'd have single or multiple sequences. (10 min) I only left this message because you very nicely asked for it and what I want to tell you, is that even though each video was completely different in it's approaches (each very helpful) basically all the titles looked the same. I just searched on creating sequences in premiere All were helpful!
thankyou! this helps, this is what I was looking for.
Yes! I'm a total newb and this was so helpful. Thank you!
Good information for the use of sequences
Yeah, this is the video I was looking. Thanks a lot. It really helped.
This is NOT what I was looking for! But I dont know if the new premiere still has the ability to put the previous sequence edit in one layer and then add more clips when making a new one. It just takes the whole edit in many layers onto the next one which was never there in the previous version and it sucks, if I'm correct!
Now I can say i have fully grasp the concept behind sequence
This was a really good basic sequences tutorial. Thanks!
Thank you so much ! This really helped me
Extremely useful, thank you. Not gonna lie, the biggest thing for me was learning how to rename sequences. I simply drag items in to make new sequences, which assigns a name based on one of the clips. I thought I was just gonna have to live with that!
I suppose more broadly, putting together the fact that sequences themselves are media items that can be dragged in is what set the light bulb off. Thanks again!
separating the scenes into sequences for a film was a great example, thanks !
You requested feedback... Great video - thanks. Done loads of editing in the past, but this is my first encounter with Premiere Pro, so sequences were new to me. Great demo and more importantly you provided a set of valid use cases where they are useful. Even my rinky-dink editing will benefit massively from them. Thanks
This was what I was looking for, an overview with real-world uses.
I was looking for this info, the presentation was a bit different from what I was specifically searching, but definitely helped me in opening up my own thoughts to see how I can use sequence to solve my problems. So yeah it covers a lot and it works
After messing around with things, I saw what I needed was to "Nest Sequence". For example, one scene contains 4 cameras all shown in a single scene like a grid format. After cutting each scene to align with one another, I wanted to nest each sequence to go on with the edits because I was done cutting the original 1hr clips to 10 minute with different cameras all aligned. Your tutorial helped basically
thanks Phil, love you!
This was perfect, thanks you!
Perfection - thanks for sharing!
That was really clear, thanks!!
Very informative. Thank you
I'm new to Adobe premiere and was looking for some clarity on how to use sequences. One thing I'd like to know is how you save sequence settings and then use them for future projects?
This is great. I am looking for the difference between a clip and a sequence and not getting them confused with each other before rendering and ending up with a video within a video.
Excellent explanation!!
Super helpful! Thank you!
Thank you so much Phil. Now it's way too clear.