Image framer pro1/30/2024 ![]() ![]() Improved the state of the Actions Menu while loading ![]() Improved Dashboard naming from Teams to Workspaces Improved the editing of Transitions when multi-selecting Improved performance of renaming slugs in the CMS Improved the Gradient editing experience on the Canvas Improved the Tags UI, we now show nesting like LI › P Improved Layer Collapsing UX to respect your selection ![]() AddedĪdded a new Enter shortcut to select nested LayersĪdded support for UL, LI, and OL Tags in AccessibilityĪdded external redirect support to the Input ComponentĪdded the ability to filter your Redirects for quick editingĪdded a warning to Redirects blocking multiple pagesĪdded Action Menu support for importing in Code For everything else that’s new in the December Update, check out the full list below, and watch the video above to learn more. We have more Page updates coming in 2024, but we believe you’ll enjoy this first round of updates. Click on the plus icon to create new Pages or new Folders, or simply drag Pages on top of one another to nest them. This makes it much easier to manage larger websites with over 100s of Pages, and it even allows you to do batch actions like updating the path of multiple pages at once, just by renaming a Folder. It’s that simple, yet surprisingly often overlooked.The December Update introduces a completely redesigned Page Panel, adding support for nesting and folders. Once we’ve hit OK after selecting the format and destination of the file we can go ahead and take it from our folder straight into Adobe Photoshop or Lightroom to make the adjustments we’d make to any other photo. Personally I choose PNG, however it all comes down to your preference and your intentions. The more common formats we’ll see here are TIFF and PNG. This stands for Digital Picture Exchange and it’s the format used when scanning film which records colour density and in fact records a lot of data relating to the frame. There are a few options here, one of which as a photographer we may not be so familiar with, and that one is DPX. Once we change this it remains selected as that format each time we do this until we change it. The option that’s rather more important to us here is the Format field. Further underneath that is the Path option, the destination of which we can change using the Browse button. ![]() We can change this name to whatever suits. When you do this you’re presented with a dialogue box which gives you a couple of options.įirst up is the File Name. I caught a composition of the two on video and I want to make something of it, so I’ve set my Playhead to the right point and I’m ready to pull out the still. Gushing over the cliff at Kilt Rock is Mealt Falls landing straight into the sea. In this example I’m taking a still from a video I made at Kilt Rock during my trip to the Isle of Skye in Scotland last week. Now move the Playhead to the position within the video from which you want to pull the still image. In this example I’m using Premiere Pro CC 2018. I want to tell you how to pull a still from a video so that you can retouch it as if it were a photo in Adobe Photoshop – something I do when I shoot with my drone quite regularly.įirst up, load the video you want to pull a frame from in Adobe Premiere Pro. Hello there! It’s #TravelTuesday again so it’s that time of the week that I, Dave Williams, jump in right here on Scott Kelby’s Photoshop Insider to share something that will hopefully fill in a gap somewhere in your creative flow! Today, as I head off on a mission to Iceland, I want to tell you about something that I’ve found valuable in the field of drone photography and videography. ![]()
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