Der Ultimative Premiere Pro Productions Leitfaden
Alles über Premiere Pro Productions.
The Ultimate Guide to Premiere Pro Productions
When Productions was introduced to Premiere Pro in 2020 it was a huge step forward in collaboration tools for Adobe, helping to take some of the editing strain out of feature films and series-length shows.
With Productions, unwieldy projects were suddenly a breeze to manage, and (most importantly) ensured that Premiere Pro would be stable even with huge amounts of footage. It was a true game changer.
Contents
What exactly is a Premiere Pro production?
Limitations of the “old” project format
Why should I use Premiere Productions? Benefits of cross-project clip referencing:
Premiere Productions use cases
What’s the difference between a Production and a Team Project?
Creating a Production in Premiere Pro Recommended changes to Preferences Project locking What do the icons mean? Shared storage Opening an existing Production Using a Production Template Importing an existing project to a Premiere Production Converting an existing Premiere Pro project to a Production How to move a Premiere Production How to rename a Premiere Production How to merge Premiere Productions
Organizing and using your Production
Dealing with backup/archived sequences Reorganizing a Production Making project copies within a Production Open projects as Read-Only Manually make duplicate clips and generate new source clips Reassociating vs relinking clips in a Production Using the Trash folder Closing a Production
How many Productions do you need?
Converting a Production to a standard project
Archiving a Production
How Productions interact with other features Productions and Render files Productions and proxies Productions and ingest Productions and frame matching Productions and source clip effects Productions and Dynamic Link Productions and multicams Productions and graphic assets Productions and text styles Productions and MOGRTs Productions and nested sequences Productions and transcriptions Productions and m