t Adds a keyframe at the current-time indicator location and gives it
Replicate’s default starting value of 2 (a 2x2 grid of replicated clips)
t Displays two thin lines in the Effect Controls Timeline: the Value graph and
the Velocity graph
9 Drag the current-time indicator to about the one-second point. Locate the one-
second point by looking in the Program Monitor or the Timeline time ruler. It’s
generally not easy to see an exact time in the Effect Controls Timeline unless
you really widen its viewing area.
10 Change the Replicate effect’s Count parameter to 4.
11 Drag the current-time indicator to about the three-second point.
12 Click the Add/Remove Keyframe button (between the two keyframe navigation
buttons). Adobe Premiere Pro adds a keyframe with the same value as the
previous keyframe. In this way, the effect will not change from the one-second
to the three-second position.
13 Press Page Down, and then press the left arrow key to go to the end of the clip.
The last frame of the clip appears.
14 Change the Count value to 10.
Your Effect Controls panel should look like the one shown here.
15 Play the clip, and note how the effect builds to a 6x6 grid, holds for two seconds,
and then changes to a 16x16 grid at the end.
Now you’ll use two methods to change two keyframe values.
16 Click the Go To Previous Keyframe button twice to move to the second
keyframe.
#
Note: Changing
the effect’s
Count parameter
automatically adds
another keyframe at the
current-time indicator’s
position in the Effect
Controls Timeline;
changing a parameter
at a location without a
keyframe automatically
adds a new keyframe.
#
Note: Pressing Page
Down takes you to the
frame following the last
frame in a selected clip.
That is by design. You
can use the keyboard
shortcut Page Down
to go to the start of
the next clip, not the
final frame of the
current clip.