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ADOBE PREMIERE 5.0
User Guide
4 Name the subclip and then choose a Location. If you have any Bin or Library windows open,
they will also appear in the Location menu along with the Project window.
5 Click OK. Premiere stores the new reference to the master clip in the window you specified.
You can also create a subclip by copying a clip in a Project, Bin, or Library window, and
then pasting in any of those windows, or by dragging a clip from the Source view to the
Project, Bin, or Library windows. If you copy from or paste to the Timeline, you create a clip
instance instead.
Using markers
Markers provide a way to indicate important points in time. They help you position and
arrange clips. The Timeline and each clip can contain its own set of up to ten markers
numbered from 0 to 9. In addition, the Timeline and each clip can individually contain up
to 999 unnumbered markers. You work with markers in much the same way you work with
In and Out points, but unlike In and Out points, markers are only for reference and do not
alter the video program. In general, add a marker to a clip for important points within an
individual clip, and add a marker to the Timeline for significant time points that affect
multiple clips, such as synchronizing video and audio on different clips.
When you add a marker to a clip in Source view or the Clip window, it and any existing
markers in the master clip will be included with the clip when you add it to the Timeline or
create a subclip. However, if you open a clip from the Project window and add a marker to it,
the marker won’t be added to any subclips or clip instances already in the Timeline.
When you add a marker to the Timeline or the Program view, it appears in both the Timeline
and in the Program view, but is not added to any master clips. A marker you add to a clip in
the Timeline appears with the clip, and a marker you add to the Timeline itself appears on
the time ruler.
c00.book for PS Page 153 Tuesday, March 31, 1998 1:28 PM