Adobe Premiere Flip Image

Rendering your Timeline

If you are running Adobe Premiere Pro with the Mercury Playback Engine in Software Only mode, your playback may not be smooth and uninterrupted. Adobe Premiere Pro can create preview renders, which are cached video files on your hard drive that allow you to play back your edit in real time if playback is not smooth.

Adobe Premiere Flip Image

During playback, you may see green, red, and yellow bars at the top of your Timeline. What do they mean?

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The green bar(s) indicates frames that have a rendered preview file associated with them and that Adobe Premiere Pro should have no problem playing back in real time at full quality.

The yellow bar(s) indicates frames for which Adobe Premiere Pro does not have a rendered preview file, and that Adobe Premiere Pro will render right before the playhead reaches them. Adobe Premiere Pro may or may not play back these frames in real time at full quality.

The red bar(s) indicate frames that do not have a rendered preview file associated with them. Adobe Premiere Pro will render these frames right before the playhead reaches them. Adobe Premiere Pro probably will not play back these frames in real time at full quality.

Where there is no colored bar(s), this indicates Adobe Premiere Pro does not have a rendered preview file associated with these frames, but that the rendering required is simple enough so that it should have no problem playing them back in real time at full quality.

The Show Dropped Frame Indicator is, as its name suggests, a way to see if frames are being skipped during playback. It is an option in the Source Monitor and Program Monitor, accessible through their options menus.

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At the top right of the Program Monitor, click the options menu icon and choose Show Dropped Frame Indicator.

Flip Image In Adobe Premiere

Press the spacebar to play your sequence.

Adobe Premiere Pro Flip Video

The indicator is at the immediate left of the Select Zoom Level menu. If the indicator is green, then frames are not being dropped. However, if the indicator is yellow, that means that frames were dropped during playback.

Hovering the mouse pointer over a yellow indicator icon will give you a tool tip that shows how many frames were dropped during playback.

Let’s generate a preview render of your Timeline.

Flip Video Premiere

  1. Select your Timeline. Press the backslash key () to view your entire sequence.
  2. Choose Sequence > Render In to Out.

    You’ll see a Rendering window with a progress bar indicating how much render time remains.

    When the progress bar finishes, the yellow and red bars at the top of your Timeline will be green, indicating frames that have been preview rendered.

  3. Press Home and then press the spacebar to play your edit.
  4. Press Command+S (Ctrl+S) to save your project.

Resizing video or image clips is done using the Scale option under the Effect Controls on the top left window. Decreasing the scale value will make the clip smaller while increasing it will enlarge the clip. To quickly scale up a video to fill the scren. (Say you had a 720P video in a 1080P project) Right click the clip in the timeline and click “Scale to Frame Size.”

For a tutorial on working with scaling as well as other clip properties, click the link below.

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