Why to use presets

                              Why to use presets 
  

                      Are you fed up with performing the same repetitive tasks in Premiere Pro? Do you often find yourself getting bored and wasting time with mundane and repetitive edits, instead of the fun and creative challenge of producing a video?
Premiere Pro presets are an excellent way to automate repetitive tasks and to free yourself to work on the creative side of editing. Here’s everything you need to know…Working with effects in Premiere Pro can be demanding on your computer, so if your computer is struggling to cope you should
Why Use a Premiere Pro Effects Preset?
Effects presets can save you a large amount of time.If you’re a video editor or YouTube content creator, you may have dozens of effects or common editing tasks you perform on every video. With effects presets, you can speed up your workflow into a one-click process. Here are some common editing tasks I perform when editing some of our review videos here at MakeUseOf:


Apply EQ, compression and adjust the gain on a voiceover
Apply a narrow 300 HZ cut to background music
Animate keyframes for rotation, scale, and position
When creating a preset for the first time, you’re prompted to specify a Type, which defaults to Scale.This type is only used when you have used keyframes in your preset. It defines the duration and handling of keyframes when the preset is applied.When you use Scale, Premiere Pro will adjust the effect duration depending on the length of your clip. If you created your effect with a 24-frame duration, and you drag it on to a clip with a 48-frame duration, then Premiere Pro will extend the effect to cover the full 48-frame duration.
Premiere Pro preset type :
This is good most of the time, but it may not always be what you want. The types Achor To In Point, and Anchor to Out Point both anchor the effect to the In or Out point respectively. This will maintain the duration you defined at creation.If you create a keyframe with a duration of 24 frames and anchor it to the In point when applied, your clip will start the preset at the beginning of the clip, and then continue for 24 frames.If anchored to the Out point, the preset will begin 24 frames before the end of the clip.These types are a very powerful way to configure your presets. If you’re still unsure how they work, the best way to learn is to create presets with each of the types selected, and then drag them onto a clip and inspect the keyframes inside the Effect Controls panel.

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