Make three-point and four-point edits – Adobe Premiere Pro CC v.7.xx User Manual

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Insert or Overwrite by dragging a clip to the Program panel

You can select and drag a clip from the Project panel, Source panel, or Media Browser into the Program monitor. When doing so, an overlay
appears in monitor to provide a visual depiction of Overwrite versus Insert edits. A tool tip appears to describe the modifier key used to toggle
between these different types of edits. To perform an Insert or Overwrite edit by dragging a clip to the Program panel, do the following:

Drag-and-drop to overwrite edit (default drag, no modifier).

Drag-and-drop to Insert edit (hold down Command/Ctrl key modifier).

The clip, or clips that can be dragged to the Program panel can either be from the Project panel, or the Media Browser. They can be AV, video
only, or audio only clips.

When a clip is dragged from the Project panel or the Media Browser into the Program monitor's video display area, the Overwrite overlay appears
by default when no modifier key is held down. A tool tip is displayed underneath the clip's thumbnail image, to drop (mouse release) to create an
overwrite edit, and that holding down the Command/Ctrl key creates an insert edit instead.

Multiple clips dragged to the Program monitor do not display a multiple clip stack icon. The file stack clip icon does not truly depict the number of
clips being dragged.

When the modifier key is held down, the overlay updates to display the Insert edit overlay. You can toggle back and forth between the
Overwrite/Insert modes in the middle of the drag-and-drop action. Hold down the modifier key and the overlay displays update.

Make three-point and four-point edits

The Source and Program Monitors provide controls to perform three-point and four-point edits—standard techniques in traditional video editing.

In a three-point edit, you mark either two In points and one Out point, or two Out points and one In point. You don’t have to actively set the fourth
point; it’s inferred by the other three. For example, in a typical three-point edit you would specify the starting and ending frames of the source clip
(the source In and Out points), and when you want the clip to begin in the sequence (the sequence In point). Where the clip ends in the sequence
—the unspecified sequence Out point—is automatically determined by the three points you defined. However, any combination of three points
accomplishes an edit. For example, sometimes the point where a clip ends in a sequence is more critical than where it begins. In this case, the
three points include source In and Out points, and a sequence Out point. On the other hand, if you need the clip to begin and end at particular
points in the sequence—say, perfectly over a line of voice-over narration—you could set two points in the sequence, and only one point in the
source.

Maxim Jago explains and demonstrates three-point edits

in this video

.

In a four-point edit, you mark source In and Out points and sequence In and Out points. A four-point edit is useful when the starting and ending
frames in both the source clip and sequence are critical. If the marked source and sequence durations are different, Premiere Pro alerts you to the
discrepancy and provides alternatives to resolve it.

Make a three-point edit

1. In a Project panel, double-click a clip to open it in the Source Monitor.

2. Click the headers of the tracks in a Timeline panel into which you want to add the clip to target them.

3. In the Timeline, drag the source track indicators to the headers of the tracks into which you want the clip components to fall.

4. In the Source and Program Monitors, mark any combination of three In and Out points.

5. In the Source Monitor, do one of the following:

To perform an insert edit, click the Insert button

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