Assembly in Premier Pro

 The Beginning

Every project has a start, and after I conducted all of my research it was time to start assembling the video. I imported all the assets that were already edited and ready to enter into the timeline, and also placed the introduction clip from the previous blog post into the Premiere Pro file.



The sound effect is a keyboard typing one. I added this to add a little realism into the intro and have a little sound so that it would look more professional. To make it realistic I edited the sound to match the text that was shown into the screen. This means that the word "THAS" which was using the scale up animation technique with letter preference was perfect for this effect. Afterwards I cut the part of the intro that was extra and kept it under 5 seconds so that it would not take time from the actual video.


The idea I was going for was a hologram television coming out of a very slim look alike phone. In order to do that I needed to create a small video that I would transform to a holographic television floating into the air.
I used iMovie for the assembly of the clip because it was faster to use and to export the footage into an mp4. I will now explain how I adjusted the clips that were not 4K or HD with my footage.



The video being exported as an mp4 file

Premiere Pro works with the resolution from the first clip. This is why every footage in order to fit into the screen must be 4K or HD. With the downloaded clips that were not HD I needed to right click and click on the "Scale to Fit" option, in order for the footage the fit the screen. The issue that arises is a decrease of resolution, but I preferred losing resolution instead of the footage having gaps on every side of the screen and looked ugly.









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