How to speed ramp your footage in Adobe Premiere Pro

Фильм және анимация

▶ Check out my gear on Kit: kit.com/jeremyying
This tutorial explains the basics of working with slow motion video footage and making it look badass with creative speed ramping.
Thank you to Jennifer May Photography Inc. for suggesting this tutorial. Music: www.bensound.com

Пікірлер: 20

  • @JeremyY
    @JeremyY6 жыл бұрын

    Skip to 2:50 if you already know how to set up a 24FPS Timeline Sequence!

  • @DcmanagementNl
    @DcmanagementNl4 жыл бұрын

    I subscribed because you made a tutorial based on a comment you got on a previous video. And you also thanked the viewer for asking the question. You really understand how this works!

  • @JeremyY

    @JeremyY

    4 жыл бұрын

    Oh wow, thank you. This really means a lot to me!

  • @DcmanagementNl

    @DcmanagementNl

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@JeremyY plus, your content is good! It's same or better then Adobe video tutorials!

  • @NandapelosAyres
    @NandapelosAyres3 жыл бұрын

    This is just what I was looking for. Thankssss!!

  • @behindthemagic2804
    @behindthemagic28045 жыл бұрын

    This the best one ... very well explained

  • @dreebble
    @dreebble5 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for this tut, nice job!

  • @JeremyY

    @JeremyY

    5 жыл бұрын

    You're welcome! Have fun speed ramping!

  • @jennifermayphotographyinc6751
    @jennifermayphotographyinc67516 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much, Jeremy! Can't believe you made this tutorial, it seems just for me! Not really, I know.... Tons of people will find it really helpful. I can't wait to try it. And thank you for answering the "what frame rate should I use when I know I am going to do a speed ramp" question. I was also looking for the answer to that. So, all around, thank you. Great tutorial, so clear.

  • @JeremyY

    @JeremyY

    6 жыл бұрын

    Oh you're so welcome. I really want to make more of these tutorials, so it's really helpful when viewers tell me what kind of videos they want! :)

  • @AlexAndreiZAR
    @AlexAndreiZAR6 жыл бұрын

    Why is everyone leaving out the mismatch of video and audio after speed ramp effect is performed? How do you fix it? This is useless if audio and video don't match in the end.

  • @alialsaffar7280
    @alialsaffar72805 жыл бұрын

    Great! What fps you export the video?

  • @LiLpaaaaac
    @LiLpaaaaac6 жыл бұрын

    Hi, nice tutorial. I have a question. I have a Sony a6300. I can record with 100fps max, because I'am from Germany and we have PAL instead of NTSC. My problem is, when i drag my 100fps footage on a 24fps timeline, moving objects or people will have a sort of "ghosting-effect" and that looks like sh*t. When Premiere showed me the "Clip Mismatch Warning" i changed the sequence settings this time instead of keeping them, and the footage have no "ghosting-effect" any more. But my sequence changed to 100fps, so the footage does not look cinematic any more. I use the 100fps footage for slow-mo an for normal speed. Do you have any idea or solution? Thank you

  • @twothirtyfilms9127
    @twothirtyfilms91276 жыл бұрын

    Hey, nice tutorial! Only thing that's left me confused is your use of optical flow in time interpolation at the end of your tutorial. If your clip was shot in 120fps, and your sequence/export settings are in 24fps, then you can slow the clip down to 20% without losing any frames. I think you went down to 30%, which means every frame premiere would export on a 24fps timeline would be a real frame, thus rendering (no pun intended) your use of optical flow pointless? My understanding of optical flow (or for that matter time interpolation in premiere pro in general) is that it literally interpolates (aka creates) a new frame between two real frames in the case of when you, lets say, use a 24fps clip on a 24fps timeline and try and apply slow-motion to it. But in this case, you aren't dropping any frames, because you recorded at the proper frame rate - so using optical flow is pointless. Unless I'm missing something in which case please correct me.

  • @JeremyY

    @JeremyY

    6 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for watching and for posting this question! Because my colleagues and I have discussed this very thing (on multiple occasions). We've sat down staring at Optical Flow'ed renders whenever this issue came up, and maybe it was the placebo effect at play but the Optical Flow'ed slow motion footage did seem to be a bit smoother. If you ask me this topic might even be deserving of its own video, because even though I'm convinced that setting Time interpolation to Optical Flow does make a difference, it'd be awesome to do a proper render comparison.

  • @mordavian
    @mordavian Жыл бұрын

    Great tutorial but frame sampling is better in some scenarios.

  • @georges8408
    @georges84084 жыл бұрын

    why we had to do time remmaping and not just change the speed ? Since the original footage is 100fps, then if you cut and use a part of a footage at 25% slow speed (in 24/25 fps timeline), don't you have the same results without optical flow long render time ?

  • @piingzz
    @piingzz5 жыл бұрын

    can you explain why im still getting stuttering in my clips. I have a sequence 24fps of proper resolution of 720p , and the clips im using is 720p 60fps. Now i place the clip in the timeline and but my clip is jumpy and looks like its dropping frames. I also did the same thing you mentioned when adding the clip to keep the sequence the way it is. What am i doing wrong?

  • @JeremyY

    @JeremyY

    5 жыл бұрын

    You drop half a frame when you put 60 FPS footage on a 24 FPS footage. Brandon Li has a really great video explaining why this happens. Highly recommend watching it to understand why dropped frames can occur: kzread.info/dash/bejne/loZrpJque8aWerg.htmlm15s

  • @matthewmorganphoto
    @matthewmorganphoto4 жыл бұрын

    How low can you go % wise? If I’m doing my math correctly then 20 percent would be 120 FPS slowness.

Келесі