Sams Teach Yourself Premiere 6.5 in 24 Hours

After making your Project Settings selection, Premiere opens its workspace. At first glance it may seem busy and counterintuitive, but after working with it for a while you'll come to appreciate its layout. For now, I'll limit my discussion to only two features:

Timeline ” For those of you who started Premiere before cracking open this book, you already ay have opted for the A/B Editing workspace. If so, your timeline ”that collection of parallel, horizontal lines in the bottom left portion of your workspace ”will say Video 1A and Video 1B with a transition line between them. You can switch that to single-track editing with a couple mouse clicks. I'll cover this in Hour 3. See Figure 2.10 for a view of both types of timelines .

Figure 2.10. If you opted for A/B editing, your timeline will look like the top window. The single-track editing workspace (bottom window) looks slightly different.

Monitors ” This is the second reason why I think it's best to choose single-track editing instead of A/B. The default workspace setting for single-track has two monitors ”two little TV windows (see Figure 2.11). One for your "source" video/images/graphics/audio and the other for the "program" (your edited project).

Figure 2.11. Selecting single-track editing means your default workspace opens with two monitors ”a more intuitive work environment.

A/B editing defaults to a single monitor, which I think is counterintuitive and confusing. You can start Premiere by selecting A/B editing and then switch to two monitors (remember that Premiere is mind-numbingly configurable), but by opting for single-track editing you at least start with the right frame of reference.

I'll give you a more detailed workspace tour in the next chapter.

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