Closed Caption Overview in Adobe Premiere Pro CC [video]

Posted on by Larry

logo_Premiere_CC.jpg[This is an excerpt from a recent online video webinar: “Closed Captions in Adobe Premiere Pro CC” which you can download in our store, or view as part of our Video Training Library.]

Closed captions are intimidating! But, closed captions are also vital to understanding a movie for anyone who has trouble hearing or speaks a different language. The problem is that creating closed captions is not easy, even though captions are required for more and more media projects today.

In this session, join host, Larry Jordan, as he demystifies closed captions and:

There’s no reason to let captions intimidate you. After this session, you’ll be able to add, modify, edit and export captions easily using Adobe Premiere Pro CC.


In this short video excerpt, Larry explains what captions are, the different formats available and gets you ready to edit captions in Adobe Premiere.

Closed Caption Overview

TRT: 6:37 – MPEG-4 HD movie

Our website offers lots more video training in our store.


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2 Responses to Closed Caption Overview in Adobe Premiere Pro CC [video]

  1. Jan Bosse says:

    Hi Larry, I just bought your webinar on closed captions and it’s excellent!
    However I have one question concerning inserts and subtitles.

    For the english version of a bulgarian documentary film (.srt file via youtube) I need not only to show the english subtitles but sometimes also at the same in interview scenes for example inserts like name and profession of the protagonist. Or for example if there is dialogue during the opening title sequece: Is it possible to create two parallel subitles (one for the translation of the titles and one for the dislogue) when the output file will be an .srt file and therefore the subtitles will not be burned in? Thank you very much for a short advice 🙂 Best regards from, Sofia, Jan

    • Larry says:

      Jan:

      To the best of my knowledge, you can only have one active SRT file at a time. This means that you either need to integrate the IDs with the subtitles, or burn the IDs into the actual video itself.

      Larry

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