I certainly don’t do this… but you canįunny you should raise the alpha issue. All you have to do is set the Start point to 50 for a fade in, and the End point to 50 for a fade out. Since it’s usually common practice to have a black leader at the beginning or tail at the end of a sequence, you can accomplish this easily with one clip.Īnd technically, you CAN create a fade to/from black using Dip to Black. Simply create the synthetic, add a short piece at the beginning or end of your sequence, and apply a single-sided cross dissolve at the appropriate place on the black video. What I advocate is using a Black Video synthetic clip to create a fade in or fade out. Most of the time, it’s not an issue, but I’ve seen it before… As described above, you can probably see why this would be the case. While in most cases you can achieve the result you want–a fade to or from black–using a cross dissolve as you’ve outlined, this can cause problems when you export to a format/codec that supports alpha/transparency. A Premiere Pro sequence is 100% alpha when the frame dimensions are not completely filled with 100% opaque clips you can see this by changing the Display Mode to Alpha and placing a clip that has smaller dimensions than the sequence into the sequence. If you use a cross dissolve on a base video layer to fade in or out to black, you’re actually dissolving to or from transparency. Strictly speaking, a Fade To/From Black is exactly that: a fade TO or FROM black. However, I don’t agree with you on using a cross dissolve as a single-side transition to achieve a fade in or fade out. I understand your point on transitions, particularly Dips and Fades.
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