Activity › Forums › Adobe Premiere Pro › Apply Effect to Clip in Project Panel
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Apply Effect to Clip in Project Panel
Posted by Charles Fasano on July 27, 2011 at 1:20 amI’d like to apply an effect to a clip prior to placing it in the sequence to see if the effect is viable. Is there a way to see how a clip will look with the effect prior to moving it to the sequence?
Thanks for any and all help.
Charles Fasano replied 14 years, 9 months ago 4 Members · 7 Replies -
7 Replies
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Ann Bens
July 27, 2011 at 8:07 pmYou got your answer on the other forum.
No point in posting again.
The answer is still no.———————————————–
Adobe Certified Expert Premiere Pro -
Charles Fasano
July 28, 2011 at 9:29 amWhen I post a topic, I post it on both forums at the same time to reach as many people as possible and to educate as many people as possible. That’s what forums are for. If you don’t like it, that’s your problem. Don’t post anything again on my posts if you have nothing to contribute.
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Ann Bens
July 28, 2011 at 8:46 pmInstead of snapping at me you might want to thank the guy from the other forum for taking the trouble of answering your questions.
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Adobe Certified Expert Premiere Pro -
Todd Kopriva
July 28, 2011 at 9:54 pmAnn makes a good implicit point about cross-posting. You’ll find that many of the same people help on multiple forums, so you don’t actually (much) increase the chances of getting an answer by cross-posting.
What you _do_ accomplish by cross-posting is fragmenting the conversation so that snippets are happening in multiple places, making it much harder for folks to follow.
Also, you make it more likely that someone will waste time trying to help you in one place before seeing that you’ve already got an answer in the other place.
So, please, if you do cross-post a question, also cross-post the answers that you get.
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Todd Kopriva, Adobe Systems Incorporated
Technical Support for professional video software
After Effects Help & Support
Premiere Pro Help & Support
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Charles Fasano
July 29, 2011 at 2:31 amExcellent Todd. I’m sure to heed your response due to the professionalism and class you exhibited. Allow me to explain that I have for many years been sure to post the responses received from the various forums. As a scientist, I am well versed in ensuring that information from one forum, if it wasn’t mentioned in the other, is shared. You can see these posts in Creative Cow’s many different forums for Final Cut Suite and on Apple’s Final Cut forums. You might not see it here in PPro’s forum yet because I am a new to PPro, having just switched from FCP. Thank you again Todd for the advise and I will be sure to follow your instructions.
For Ann…your indignant behavior on this thread warrants me to notify you to NEVER post to my threads again. You have shown a disgusting lack of professionalism and character, and I want nothing of my being, professionally and personally, to ever associate with your deplorable mannerism. I have saved this thread and will not hesitate to notify a moderator of your undeserved actions towards me and request your expulsion.
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John Rich
July 29, 2011 at 6:02 pmCharles,
I read through this thread and I never found the link to the other thread. Did I miss it? If not, would you mind posting that link.
Thanks,Actually, I never understood why it was bad to “cross Post”. Occasionally, I’ve seen the same question posted on several non Cow forums as well, but I always thought it was interesting to get different opinions and thoughts about the question.
Just my opinion.
John Rich
JOHNR
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Charles Fasano
July 30, 2011 at 8:37 pmSorry John for the delayed reply. I’ve been at sea for the past couple of days.
Here is the link to the other post:
https://forums.adobe.com/thread/882464?tstart=0I didn’t post it earlier because it was such an elementary subject with no conflicting debates. It literally was just a yes or no answer.
Thanks again.
Charlie
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