Premiere elements project files




















To see more of the column headings in List view, drag the right side of the Project Assets panel to the right. Alternatively, drag the scroll bar at the bottom of the panel to the right. Organize clips in folders. In the Project Assets panel, do any of the following:.

Rename a source file in a project. The change affects only references used in the project; the name of the original source file remains the same in the Project workspace and on your computer. To rename an original source file, close Adobe Premiere Elements before you rename it. The next time you open the project, Adobe Premiere Elements asks you to locate the file.

Find an item in a project. Right-click an item in the Expert view timeline, and select Reveal In Project. Locate missing files for a project. In the Where Is The File dialog box, choose one of the following options:.

Replaces the missing file with the original or replacement file. Starts the Windows XP Search feature. Skip All. Replaces all missing clips with offline files without asking you for confirmation.

Delete a clip. If you specify lower-quality settings for output such as streaming web video , do not change your project settings. Change your export settings instead. When you add a movie clip to the Expert view timeline, Adobe Premiere Elements automatically changes your project settings in the background to match the clip properties. They include dimension, fps, pixel aspect ratio, and field order. Adobe Premiere Elements includes default project presets for media from common sources like cameras, DVD discs, and mobile phones among others.

You can select from a list of available presets, however, you cannot create custom presets. The presets for any project can only be selected at the time of creating the project. You cannot change the preset for a project after it has been created. The Project Presets are listed in the New Project dialog box. To view the list of all presets and their settings, select More and click View All Presets. Select a new preset to create projects in a different format, television standard, or frame aspect ratio.

Select one of the available presets from Landscape, Portrait, Square, and Social. After you create a project, you can only make minor display-related changes to the project settings. Project presets include project settings under three categories: General, Capture, and Video Rendering.

However, you can review the settings to ensure that the media you want to add to the project is compatible. PAL presets conform to the PAL standard, where each video frame includes lines displayed at 25 frames per second.

They include the editing mode used to process video, frame size, aspect ratios, count time Display Format , and playback settings Timebase. These settings match the most common source media in your project. The quality of your video can deteriorate if you change these settings arbitrarily. Editing Mode. Identifies the television standard and format for the project. The Project Presets are listed in the New Project dialog box.

To view the list of all presets and their settings, select More and click View All Presets. For more information, see Project settings and presets. Select one of the available presets from Landscape , Portrait , Square , and Social.

You can import a clip whose settings do not match the settings of an empty project. Adobe Premiere Elements overwrites the project settings with the settings of your clip when you drop it onto the Expert view timeline. Select Force selected project presets to this project if you do not want Adobe Premiere Elements to change your project settings. By default, the folder where you save your project also stores rendered previews, conformed audio files, and captured audio and video. These files are large, so save them to your largest, fastest hard drive.

Adobe Technical Support uses this information to assist you if you call. Important: If you use Windows Vista or later, some of these procedures initiate a User Account Control dialog that asks for your permission to continue.

Read the details in the dialog to determine if you want to continue. If you choose to cancel the dialog, you can't continue with that troubleshooting step. Note: The procedures in this document are based on the default interface of Windows, except for the Control Panel. The steps in this document that refer to the Control Panel are in reference to the Classic view. To switch to the Classic view, right-click on the Desktop and choose Properties.

On the Appearance tab, select Windows Classic style under Windows and buttons. By default, Windows Explorer doesn't show hidden files, hidden folders, and filename extensions that it recognizes. For information on showing hidden files and folders in Windows, see Show hidden files, hidden folders, and all filename extensions Windows XP Vista Windows 7.

The following tasks help you resolve the most common system errors. Before performing any of these tasks, back up all personal files for example, Adobe Premiere Elements files that you created. Always restart the computer after a system error occurs to refresh its memory.

Continuing to work without restarting the computer compounds the problem. Change the maximum Project Versions to Open Adobe Premiere Elements, and then open your project from within Adobe Premiere Elements rather than double-clicking the project file to launch the project and Adobe Premiere Elements. The PluginCache is a Windows registry entry that contains information regarding the status of all native and third-party plug-ins used with Adobe Premiere Elements.

Release the key when the Select Initial Workspace window appears. Note: Adobe Premiere Elements stores information about the viability of its plug-ins on the initial launch of the application.

This information is stored in the Windows registry to allow Adobe Premiere Elements to open faster on all subsequent launches.



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