Features
- Cover Type: Paperback with 360 pages
- Published by: Peachpit Press; 1 Pap/Dvdr edition April 12, 2009
- Written in: English
- ISBN 10 Number: 0321606213
- ISBN 13 Number: 978-0321606211
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Book Dimensions:
9 x 7.9 x 0.9 inches
- Weighs: 1.7 pounds
Review
"This colourful tome promises to guide you on much more than the simple tasks of splicing together clips and creating basic titles. Using a fun and unique approach to learning the software, the authors teach you how to overlay multiple tracks for video, create picture-in picture effects, use keyframes and motion paths, colour and sound for emotional impact, get a better understanding of using green screen material, and perform a range of other tasks that will add amazing effects to your movies." Northern Echo, 14th July 2009
Reader Reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
Let me start this review by stating that Carl Plumer's prior book Hollywood Special Effects with Adobe Premiere Elements 3 (HSE PE3) is my favorite software application "How-to" book, ever. If there was a 6 star rating I would give it to the HSE PE3. When I first heard about "Creating Hollywood Style Movies with Adobe Premiere Elements 7" (CHSM PE7) by the same author, I bought it without any review, because I thought, if it was anything like HSE PE3 with new effects it would be worthwhile. Because the book had a slightly different name and due to the fact that the cover photo was not like any effect in the previous book, I was hopeful that this would be more like a Vol. 2, rather than a rewrite for PE7. If you haven't guessed, that's the disappointment, it's a rewrite. Now, don't get me wrong, there are new effects in CHSM PE7; just so few, that for owners of HSE PE3, you may want to save the $30 (especially in this economy:-)). However, I'm happy to say though that the new version is as richly illustrated as that previous version (obviously for Premier Elements 7). The literal 1, 2, 3 stepped version points out for virtually every step, and doesn't assume you know or remember a technique that you learned in a prior chapter. So, if you don't have HSE PE3, and are looking for a great step-by-step guide to PE 7 this book will fit the bill. If you can make the PE3 to PE7 transition (by the way, there is no such thing as Adobe Premier Elements version 5 or 6, so it is not such a dramatic change as it sounds from the last book) it is pretty much the same book for the user. To Carl Plumer and Paul Ekert's credit, all the illustrations and graphics are different (after all it is a new version), and I'm sure the authors felt like they were creating a new book. But a side-by-side comparison shows the similarity between the two books: CHSM PE 7 --
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