Learn about the intricacies of time remapping in Premiere Pro, including how to accelerate and decelerate speeds, create variations, and even make clips go backwards. This tutorial provides step-by-step instructions for these techniques, which are crucial for crafting impactful video projects.
Key Insights
- Time remapping in Premiere Pro allows for speed variations within video clips, rather than a single, consistent speed.
- To access the time remapping function, control-click on a clip and select "Show Clip Keyframes Time Remapping Speed" or select "Time Remapping Speed" from the Effects menu on each clip.
- The pen tool is used to determine the start and stop points for time remapping, but you must switch back to the selector tool to execute the time remapping.
- Speed can be adjusted by dragging the remapping line up to speed up or down to slow down, and speed changes can be ramped for a smoother transition.
- Creating a 'backwards' effect in time remapping involves making two points and pulling the first one out while holding the command key. This results in a repetition of the clip, where it first plays backwards and then forwards.
- Alterations for time remapping can also be made in the Effects Control Panel, where you can adjust the speed or create a backward effect, similar to adjustments made on the timeline.
In this video, we'll learn how to manipulate speed by gradually slowing down and gradually speeding up our footage using Time Remapping.
Video Transcription
Hi, this is Margaret with Noble Desktop. Today, we'll be learning time remapping in Premiere Pro. Make sure to have all the items checked in your wrench tool before you start. Time remapping is the ability to have speed decelerate and accelerate as you see fit. For example, if you click on a clip and say Command + R and then 300, that's just one speed. There's no variation in that speed. Time remapping allows you to create variations in your speed.
To get to the time remapping function, you can control-click on any clip and say "Show Clip Keyframes Time Remapping Speed" or go to the tiny Effects item in the corner of every one of your clips and select "Time Remapping Speed". Now you have a time remapping line. It's not an opacity line like you'd have with the Opacity line. It's in the middle of the clip.
So, let's determine what areas we want to use time remapping on. I'm going to start right at the beginning and use the pen tool (P for pen) to determine where you'd like to start and stop. I'm going to stay right here. This area from here to here, I'd like there to be an acceleration.
It's very important after you've created your two points or more that you leave the pen tool and go back to the selector tool because time remapping will not work while you're in the pen tool. If you want to go fast, boost it up, or to go slow, pull down. You can also ramp the speed so it's less abrupt.
Now let's say that here I'd like this to be slow motion. Using the pen tool (P for pen), pull down to make it slow. After you do this, be sure to go back to the selector tool. The space between your two points will increase when you make it slow.
Let's make something go backwards in time remapping. Open up the time remapping option, make two points, and go back to the selector tool. On the first point, hold the command key and pull out. You will notice little arrows, indicating it will go backwards. Then, it repeats itself. This clip is as it was before, not backwards. It's a funny quirk in Premiere that it doesn't allow you to just go backwards. It goes backwards, then shows the clip as it originally was forward.
For other adjustments, you can also use the effects control panel. Move the pinpoint up to make it faster, or use the command key to pull out and make it go backwards. You can do the same things here as on the timeline.
I hope you've enjoyed this lesson in time remapping in Premiere Pro. This has been Margaret with Noble Desktop.