Activity › Forums › Adobe Premiere Pro › Add 20 frame handles to every shot?
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Add 20 frame handles to every shot?
Posted by James Brill on March 25, 2013 at 5:54 pmIs there a way to take a timeline I have and add 20 frame handles to every clip relatively quickly? Basically making every clip in my timeline longer by adding 10 frames on each side of the edits.
Maciej Urbanek replied 2 weeks, 4 days ago 6 Members · 7 Replies -
7 Replies
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Ann Bens
March 26, 2013 at 10:48 am -
Tim Jones
March 29, 2013 at 4:29 pmExcellent tip – is anyone cataloging things like this?
Tim
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Tim Jones
CTO – TOLIS Group, Inc.
https://www.productionbackup.com
BRU … because it’s the RESTORE that matters! -
James Brill
March 29, 2013 at 4:57 pmThis is great thank you! I’m guessing I can use the same tool to remove the handles too and bring it back to the duration of the original edit
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James Brill
March 29, 2013 at 11:17 pmI must be doing something wrong. I can ripple to the right 10 frames to lengthen the tail of the edits but if I ripple to the left to extend the edit 10 frames at their heads it just undoes my ripple to the right.
What do I do? Ripple the tail out 20 frames and then slip 10?
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Meredith Jordan
March 21, 2017 at 8:25 pmI know this question is old but I’m having the same problem as the original poster. The ripple trim tool works perfectly to add 20 frames to the end of every clip but when I try to add to the beginning of every clip, it deselects all the clips and just adds to the one I’ve actually selected. Any solution? It would be great if it were possible in the same way you can add to the beginning of multiple clips when they are on different tracks.
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Viktor Liashenko
March 16, 2022 at 8:26 pmOne of the method you can use it is:
1. Select “Ripple Edit Tool”.2. Zoom out and select all needed clips.
3. On numerical keyboard write +10 and press NumPad Enter.
4. Then press SHIFT+T (Toggle Trim Type) and it will change selection to another side of clip.5. Enter -10 on numerical keyboard and press NumPad Enter.
That’s all. You will add handles to all the clips you need. Maybe IN handle for the first clip you will need to change manually.
Also I’ve noticed, that if you will zoom in to max before processing handles it will increase speed of work of Premiere. -
Maciej Urbanek
October 24, 2024 at 8:02 amThe easiest way (for me) is
– duplicate the clip
– select all the clips in the timeline
– go to -> clip -> render and replace
– choose the format and tick the box next to “include handles”This will render all your clips with handles and replace them in the new composition makin it easy for hand off to another editor or CC.
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