Adobe Premiere Elements Video Editing Software Review
If you’re been in video editing for any length of time, you’ll be familiar with video editing software packages from Adobe Systems. Adobe has traditionally been operating in the professional video editing genre, with its flagship Adobe Premiere product line.
Adobe Premiere Elements is Adobe’s first attempt at a consumer video-editing application. The idea is to strip down the feature set in Adobe Premiere Pro and allow the average home user to edit videos quickly and easily.
In this review, we’ll take a look at some features of Adobe Premiere Elements.
In my opinion the programmers at Adobe simply placed a nice user interface on top of Adobe Premiere Pro to create Premiere Elements. There’s a taskbar that guides you through the workflow, from capture to exporting. To help beginners, Adobe added a number of customizable presets for common operations, such as PiP effects and still-image pans and zooms.
The main screen in Adobe Premiere Elements
Capturing Your Video
Using Adobe Premiere Elements to capture video is a fairly straight forward process. Elements will capture via Firewire, using either a camcorder or analogue capture via a analog-to-digital conversion device.
Once you’ve captured the raw video, there are a few things you can choose to do. A nice tool is to use Scene Detect, which automatically detects various scenes in the entire footage and exports it to the timeline. If you’ve used Pinnacle Studio Plus, you’ll realize that Premiere Elements does not allows you to control brightness, contrast, hue, saturation and audio levels before or during capture.
Editing Your Video
Editing your video with Premiere Elements is very simple if you stick to the presets, operation remains fairly simple. However, if you venture beyond into the Effects Control palette, you’ll immediately see the intimidating screens found in Premiere Pro – which may scare off novices. This is not a bad thing though – some Premiere Pro’s most powerful functions like the titling tool and chroma key capabilities are at your disposal.
The timeline in Elements opens with 4 tracks showing: 2 video and 2 audio. Audio or video tracks may be added, and the link between captured audio and video can be broken so that clips can move independently. You can place transitions between 2 adjacent clips on the timeline – and there is a wide variety to choose from.
Integration with Photoshop Elements
If you edit photos with Adobe Photoshop Elements, you’ll be pleased to know that Photoshop Elements can be used to edit any image on the Premiere Elements timeline. Once edited, the image on the timeline is updated automatically. This tight integration with an image editor is not found in competing products like Pinnacle Studio Plus and Ulead VideoStudio.
Audio Capabilities
A note about audio capabilities to highlight here. In Elements, like in most other video editing programs, you need to record voice overs separately and then import it to the project. This is where Pinnacle Studio outshines over virtually every other editing program – you can record directly to the timeline.
DVD Authoring
Burning the edited video onto a DVD is always a problem for many consumers who are just starting out in digital video production. Fortunately, in Adobe Premiere Elements, the process is extremely simple.
The program provides 33 DVD menu templates, most of which are stunning. The program will automatically generate DVD menu markers, or you can set them manually in the timeline quite easily. However, there are restrictions – you can customize only text, neither can you modify the backgrounds that come from the templates.
Shortcomings
Although it has many great features, Adobe Premiere Elements is not without its quirks. In my test run, I found that Premiere Elements didn’t like my MSI DVD burner during the DVD burn process. I had to render the files to a folder and then use a separate DVD burning application (Nero Burning ROM) to burn my video.
Most DVD burners appear to work fine with Adobe Premiere Elements, many of my friends have no problems at all with this issue. So possibly this issue may be limited to MSI.
Conclusion
On the whole, Adobe Premiere Elements is a nice consumer video editing program that will please many. By incorporating high-quality effects and precise controls, along with a chroma key tool and picture-in-picture options, Premiere Elements is will allow you to make amazingly good movies. Definitely worth a look for the budding videographer.
Incidentally, if you’re also looking for a image photo editing application, you should know that you can buy Adobe’s bundle (combining Premiere Elements with Photoshop Elements) for $149.99 – a real bargain for video editing software.
Another honest product review from MakeCashNow.biz Home Business and PLR Membership Website.
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