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Chris Salters

Copy and Paste from Premiere Pro to After Effects

How to copy and paster between Premiere Pro to After Effects.


You’ve heard it here a lot. A little bit of Premiere Pro knowledge can go a long way in making you a better/quicker After Effects user. Liam covered some useful Premiere Pro tips for us before, but let’s go a step further. Even if you’re a seasoned Motion Graphics veteran, the trick I’m about to tell you will in no uncertain terms, blow your mind.


Ever worked on a project where you needed to dig through hours of footage to find the perfect clip or clips to use in After Effects? Sure you have. And because of that, you know how miserable that process can be. The footage window is clunky, scrubbing can be slow, marking in and out points isn’t intuitive, and that’s only when you’re looking at a single clip. You’ve probably even said to yourself, “Self, this blows.”


But what can you do? Jump over to Premiere Pro, that’s what.


Find Footage Faster: Make a Stringout

To start, open up Premiere Pro and make a new bin (ctrl+B or cmd+B). Name it ‘footage’ or ‘clips’ or ‘jelly beans’ – something that’s at least marginally descriptive to what you’re digging through. Next, select all of the footage clips you want to look through, right click, and select “Make New Sequence From Clip”. Premiere Pro then creates a new sequence – with the same name as the clip you right clicked – that matches that clip’s settings (frames per second, resolution, etc). This sequence has every clip in it that you had previously selected. Editors like to call these types of sequences ‘stringouts’ and they make it much easier to scrub through large amounts of footage very quickly.


Move Footage: Copy and Paste

Since we’re interested in finding a specific clip in this stringout, start scrubbing until you find what you’re looking for, Select the entire clip that you’re interested in, right click, and copy (ctrl+C or cmd+C). Jump to the beginning of your sequence and move the video track target to “V2”. Paste (ctrl+V or cmd+V) your clip and you’ll see it appear on the V2 track in your sequence. 



At this point, you’re probably not that impressed. Bear with me – the magic is coming. Now, select the clip you just paste to the beginning of the sequence and copy it. Then jump into an After Effects comp and paste again.


That’s right, you just copied a clip from Premiere Pro into an After Effects comp. How easy was that? Easy. The secret sauce that Adobe uses here gets even sweeter. If you’re using an effects package that works across Premiere and After Effects, like Red Giant Universe, those effects are copied too! Other things that copy over are transform effects, Lumetri color effects, transitions, opacity and speed attributes. You can even apply a ton of effects to an adjustment layer in Premiere Pro and copy that adjustment layer into an After Effects comp with the effects in-tact! The possibilities are out of this world.


A Quick Caveat

The reason we moved the clip to the beginning of the sequence in Premiere is because during the copy and paste process, the clip is copied to the corresponding timecode from Premiere to After Effects. So if your clip is copied from 2 minutes and 12 frames in to your sequence, but you copy to an After Effects comp that’s 10 seconds long, the clip will still be pasted at 2 minutes and 12 frames in to the 10 second long comp and you won’t be able to see it (without more work).


That’s it! Your copy and paste game has been officially elevated.

 

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