I shoot my video in HD at a 1920 wide by 1080 high resolution so the sequence I am creating in the edit has those settings. My preferred way of working is to create my edit as normal in a sequence. Note that the 9:16 video will be cropped when it appears in the feed. Powerful tools and intuitive controls let you quickly assemble your clips into compelling content, whether for a big-screen blockbuster or viral web content. Trimming, cropping, and editing video is fast and easy with Adobe Premiere Pro. If you create the vertical video in Premier Pro you can be sure the crop hasn’t had a negative effect on the video.Ĭonfusingly Instagram has a 9:16 ratio for IGTV and Instagram stories. The indispensable cutting tool for video creatives. This gives a 4:5 ratio and is perfect for the news feed. You can keep it as 16:9 if you tap the crop button and choose 16:9 but you are not maximising the screen and your beautiful landscape video looks pretty small.īest then to upload a video in a vertical format. No surprise then that many businesses have a presence on Instagram and of course you might wish to upload your own creative video content as well as video content you create for your clients.Ī 16:9 ratio video uploaded to the platform will be cropped to a square. A quick Google for stats on Instagram and I found that 1 billion people use Instagram every month and of those 1 billion visitors 200 million of them will visit a business profile each day. I created it as a reminder and quick reference for myself but if you come across it and find it useful then brilliant!Īs I am sure you know, Instagram is hugely popular and a great way to share photos and videos.
Heck it would take a junior engineer at most a day to put the actual size in parentheses behind the percentages.Here is my little handy guide on how to do that. Thank you This is an annoying long time shortcoming of premiere pro. Premiere Pro works with RGB and YUV color spaces.
The plug-in has a graphical user interface and supports 8, 16 and 32 bit depth. In addition, you can use it to fill in the color of the external part of the cropping and add a frame to the image. so do you know how I can find the exact size of the cropped area in mm in premiere (and not in %)? This plug-in allows you to crop the image and blend the cropping border. If I know the exact size of the cropped area I can change the frame size to the exact size of the cropped area. So there is a big black not-symmetric area around the cropped area. I can crop the HD video, but when I adjust the crop size it is in percentage (%) so I have no idea what is the actual size of the cropped area. Now I want to crop/resize the HD video so that I can have just the square window in the new video. So in the video there is a square window that is opened and the camera is capturing whatever is outside of the window. Suppose that you have a HD video captured by your camera mounted on tripod inside your room looking outside through a square window. It is "setting" and in the editing mode, there is no desktop option. Although, in the latest version, there is no custom tab.
To set a custom sequence, create a new sequence, hit the custom tab, and under editing mode select "desktop" So you would have to either distort the image (squish it so everything is skinny), or crop off the sides 1920x1080) onto that, it would be too wide, because the DAR is 16:9.
For example, if you had a 400x400 sequence, 1:1 square pixels, it would be a "square". Or you might need letterboxing or pillarboxing to preserve the aspect ratio (black borders), or crop out an area. So you can resize the various videos and assets to the sequence, but they might get distorted if they are already different aspect ratios (e.g. Here is a link to a tutorial on how to use the effect 4 point garbage matte. It allows you to set 4 points which create a box and everything outside it is removed. If you are doing it the other way, you can think of a sequence as the "canvas" of a painting. You want to use an effect thats called a 4 point garbage matte. I suspect you mean square pixels, for something like 400x400 So it depends on which Aspect Ratio you are specifically referring to. So the resized dimensions will determine the display aspect ratio (DAR). If you use 1:1, it will use "square pixels". There is a setting for pixel aspect ratio (PAR). Then you would probably use the second option of resizing in Adobe Media Encoder when you export. If you have videos already that you are importing, they already have a certain aspect ratio.