Select Graphics > Replace Fonts in Project.
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The Graphics workspace and Essential Graphics panel in Premiere Pro provides a powerful workflow that allows you to create titles, graphics, and work with captions directly within Premiere Pro.
Starting with Premiere Pro version 25.0, the Essential Graphics panel is no longer included. You can now edit titles, captions, audio, video, and graphics more efficiently using the new Properties panel and browse Motion Graphics and Stock Audio using the Graphics Templates panel.
Check for updates
Start exploring the latest enhancements and features.
You can also use the Essential Graphics panel to customize Motion Graphics templates (.mogrt files) created in After Effects or Premiere Pro. For more information on Motion Graphics templates, see Using Motion Graphics templates in Premiere Pro.
Access the Graphics workspace and the Essential Graphics panel
To access the Graphics workspace: Click Graphics in the workspace bar at the top of the screen or select Window > Workspaces > Graphics from the main menu.
To access the Essential Graphics panel: By default, the Essential Graphics panel is a part of the Graphics workspace. However, if you do not see it, you can directly open it by clicking Window > Essential Graphics.
Parts of the Essential Graphics panel
Browse
Use this tab to browse Motion Graphics templates (.mogrt files) in Adobe Stock. These are professionally designed templates you can easily drag to your timeline and customize. Adobe Stock is a marketplace for video footage, Motion Graphics templates, photos, and more. For more information, see Browsing and managing Motion Graphics templates.
Edit
Use this tab to:
- Align and transform layers, change appearance properties, edit text properties and more.
- Add keyframes to your Premiere Graphics (prgraphics)
- Modify exposed properties for your After Effects Graphics (aegraphics)
Create graphics
Premiere Graphics can contain multiple text, shape, and clip layers, similar to layers in Photoshop. Multiple layers can be contained inside a single Graphic track item in your sequence. When you create a new layer, a graphic clip containing that layer is added to your timeline, starting at the playhead location. If you already have a graphic track item selected, then the next layer you create gets added to the existing graphic clip.
Any graphics you create in Premiere Pro can be exported as a Motion Graphics Template (.mogrt) to Local Templates Folder, Local Drive, and Creative Cloud Libraries for sharing or reuse.
You can create Graphic Layers even if the sequence does not yet contain any video clips.
Create text layers
Create a title using the Type tool in the Program Monitor or the New Layer > Text commands in the Graphics Menu. For more information, see Create a title.
Create shape layers
Premiere Pro has a Pen Tool, a Rectangle Tool, an Ellipse Tool, and a Polygon Tool for creating freeform shapes and paths. For more information, see Create a shape.
Create clip layers
Add still images and video clips as layers within your graphic. For more information, see Create a clip layer.
You can add still image and video clips as layers within your graphic. You can create clip layers using one of the following methods:
- In the Edit tab of the Essential Graphics panel, select the New Layer icon and choose From File.
- In the application menu bar, select Graphics > New Layer > From File.
- Select a still image or a video item in your Project panel. Drag-and-drop that item into the Layers panel of the Essential Graphics panel or onto an existing Graphic in your Timeline.
Make sure that the graphic is selected in the Program Monitor. If the graphic is not selected, the options are not available.
Also note that there are various Editable properties for each type of selected layer, multiple selected layers, and for whole Graphics (Graphic is selected but no layers are).
You can replace fonts in a project, updating all fonts simultaneously instead of updating them individually. For example, if you have a graphic with multiple layers of text and you decide to change the font, you can use the Replace Fonts in Projects command to change the font of all the layers simultaneously.
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The Replace Fonts in Projects window panel opens containing a list of fonts used in the project.
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Under Replacement Font, type in the font you want to replace with.
Note:Replace Fonts will replace all instances of the chosen fonts across all sequences and all open projects. It is not just for changing fonts for all layers in one Graphic.
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Once the Replacement Font has been selected, click OK.
Grouping text and graphic layers is useful when working with complex text and graphic elements. Grouping layers keeps the Edit tab of the Essential Graphics panel uncluttered, and is also useful when you want to create cool masking effects.
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Select multiple layers in the Essential Graphics panel.
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Do one of the following:
- Click the Create Group icon at the bottom of the Edit section of the Essential Graphics panel.
- Right-click the selected layers and select Create Group from the context menu.
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To add layers to a group, do one of the following:
- Drag a layer to the group folder.
- Drag a group folder into another group folder. The group and all of its layers move.
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To ungroup layers, select the layers and move them out of the group.
Rename layers
Premiere Pro supports inline name editing. Shape layers and clip layers can be renamed in the Essential Graphics Panel. To rename a layer in the Essential Graphics Panel, do the following:
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Click the name of the layer.
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Edit the name in the text field.
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To save the new name, do one of the following:
- Click Enter.
- Click away from the text field.
Inline name editing does not work for text layers because the name of the text layer is the text shown in the Program Monitor.
Alternately, you can right-click on a shape or clip layer in the Essential Graphics Panel. Select Rename from the pop-up list. Type a new name in the text field and click OK.
Create Source Graphics
You can use the Upgrade to Source Graphic (previously known as Upgrade to Master Graphic) option to create a Source Clip (previously known as Master Clip) item in your Project Panel from a graphic clip in your sequence.
Any new graphics made from a Source Graphic, including the one you upgraded from, are always exact duplicates of each other. This include the source text string. Any changes made to the text, style, or contents in an instance of a Source Graphic get reflected in all other instances of the Source Graphic.
To create a Source Graphic, select Graphics > Upgrade to Source Graphic.
You can animate text layers, shape layers, and paths using keyframes. You can add animation directly from within the Essential Graphics panel, or by using the Effect Controls panel.
Animate layers using the Essential Graphics panel
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Select the layer you want to animate in the Essential Graphics panel.
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Click the icon next to the property you want to animate (Position, Anchor Point, Scale, Rotation, or Opacity).
This action toggles on animation for the property. The icon for the selected property turns blue to indicate that animation is active.
Note:Clicking the icon in Essential Graphics panel is the same as clicking the Stopwatch in Effect Controls panel. If you toggle on animation in one location, it appears active in the other view too.
With animation toggled on in the Essential Graphics panel, a new keyframe is added to the Essential Graphics panel or timeline each time you change the animated property.
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Move your playhead and adjust this property in the Essential Graphics panel or directly in the Program Monitor to record the keyframes.
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Refine your animation using the Effect Controls panel or by adjusting the keyframes in your timeline using the Show Clip Keyframes option.
Animate layers using the Effect Controls panel
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Locate the layer you want to animate in the Effect Controls panel.
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To toggle animation for the desired property, click the Stopwatch icon.
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To achieve the effect you want, click Add/Remove keyframes.
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To access interpolation settings such as Bezier curves and Ease In/Ease Out, right click a keyframe.
You can edit and transform vector graphics without rasterizing them using vector motion controls. It prevents pixelation and eliminates boundaries caused by undesired cropping.
You can edit vector graphics directly from within the Essential Graphics panel, or by using the Effect Controls panel.
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Double click in the Program Monitor to apply changes to the whole graphic using Vector Motion.
Make sure that you do not double click on a Layer in the Program Monitor. That will select the layer for direct manipulation and not the whole graphic.
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You can apply changes to the whole graphic using Vector Motion in the Effect Controls panel. You can also use Motion, but this change rasterizes graphics and pixelates them when scaled.
Note:To remove pixelated text, remove existing keyframes. Re-create the animation using Vector Motion.
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You can edit parameters for Position, Scale, Rotation, and Anchor Points.
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Refine your animation using the Effect Controls panel or by adjusting the keyframes in your timeline using the Show Video Keyframes option.
Export your Graphic, including all layers, effects and keyframes, as a Motion Graphics template for future reuse or sharing.
Select Graphics > Export Motion Graphics template. You can also right-click the graphic clip in your timeline and select Export As Motion Graphics Template.
This export feature is only available for graphics created in Premiere Pro, not for .mogrt files that were originally created in After Effects.
The Export As Motion Graphics Template option is unavailable or greyed out when two or more Graphics are selected or if it is an After Effects Graphic.
TIP:
If you are creating a Motion Graphics template for your own future reuse, save it to the Local Templates folder. It is also available without installation if you export to a Library. You may have to filter to show that Library in the Broswe tab of the Essential Graphics panel.
Examples and sample files
For this exercise, you need the latest version of Premiere Pro and this free clip from Adobe Stock (clip ID 222379417).
Viewing time: 10 minutes
Viewing time: 45 seconds
Talk to us
If you have a question on working with text or graphics, ask away in our Premiere Pro community. We would love to help.