
Find the Multi-Camera clip in your Project browser. To do this, you need to open up the multi-camera clip. Some issues may arise for which you need to edit the source footage. Grab the edit point you wish to change and drag along the sequence to reposition the cut. Hit N on the keyboard to switch the Rolling Edit tool. If you want to keep the camera angles the same, but slightly adjust the edit point, you can do so using the Rolling Edit tool: Simply select the clip, and click on a different angle. You might decide that you need to swap the angle used for a particular edit without deleting and redoing the edit point. The edit will be deleted, and the clip will revert to the angle of the clip before it. Select the point between 2 clips and hit Delete. You’ll see each has a label indicating the camera angle. Zoom in to your sequence so that you can see the cuts between in the clip. Part 2: Adjust & Refine Your Multi-Camera Sequence 1. With practice, multi-camera editing can be quite a quick process, as you can make cuts while the video is playing. If you have more than 4 angles to manage, you can organize and select cameras across multiple pages, and navigate between them as needed. If you want to disable an angle you no longer want to use just deselect it by clicking on the checkbox. From here, you can easily drag-and-drop the clips to change the order. To reorganize your camera angles, select Edit Cameras. Using your keyboard, press the number allocated to the camera angle. Play through the sequence until you reach a point that you would like the camera angles to change. Premiere Pro will add an edit, switching to that angle.
Play through the sequence until you reach a point that you would like the camera angles to change, click on the camera angle in the Program Monitor.There are 2 ways to edit between camera angles: The smaller windows display the individual clips that make up the multi-camera clip. The largest of the windows in the Program Monitor is your Active camera. Go back to the wrench icon and select Overlays.In the setting box, check Enable Overlays during playback, followed by OK.
Go to the Program Monitor and click on the settings wrench icon, select Overlay Settings. Toggling this on allows you to use hotkeys to cut between camera angles. The overlay adds a number to each of the clips that make up your Multicam clip. Click OK to close the Button editor, then click on the multi-camera icon in the button bar to open the multi-camera view.Īdding the Overlay settings isn’t a necessity, but we strongly recommend you do. Drag the icon and drop it on your button bar. Go to your Button editor, then select the multi-camera editing icon, Multi-Camera View.