Adobe Premiere Pro 15.4 now offers the Speech to Text feature – an integrated and automated workflow for creating transcriptions and captions – and some more updates such as new titling and caption styling tools, color improvements, and more. Premiere Pro, Media Encoder, and Character Animator now offer native support for M1 Macs. After Effects (Beta) introduces new Multi-Frame Rendering for faster motion graphics workflows. Character Animator now includes a new body tracker and puppet maker. After releasing the Premiere Pro Public Beta last month, Adobe is now releasing some new features to its Creative Cloud video post-production apps. This July update includes the NLE Premiere Pro, Media Encoder, After Effects, and Character Animator. Let’s take a look at what is new. Adobe Premiere Pro – Speech to Text New Text to Speech feature in Premiere Pro. Source: Adobe According to Adobe, videos with captions are better for SEO as they rank higher in search results. With the new feature Speech to Text in Premiere Pro 15.4, Adobe wants to make the process of creating captions much faster and easier. As its name implies, the feature simply transforms spoken text into captions. As Adobe states, the new feature cuts the time needed to create transcription and captions by approximately 75% (according to Pfeiffer Report). Additionally, there is now a new way to search and navigate video sequences – double-click on a word in the Text panel, and the playhead moves to that position in the Premiere Pro timeline. New Text to Speech feature in Premiere Pro. Source: Adobe Currently, Speech to Text supports 13 languages. When changes are needed, such as correcting the spelling of names, users can easily edit the text in the transcript. When the transcript is ready, Speech to Text automatically creates captions on the Timeline. Once the words are on the Timeline, captions can be customized using the design tools in the Essential Graphics panel. Speech to Text is included with a Premiere Pro or Creative Cloud all apps subscriptions at no additional cost. Premiere Pro 15.4 – Additional Updates The new Premiere Pro 15.4 offers more updates. There are new titling and caption styling tools such as the ability to add multiple shadows to text layers, the ability to change attributes of text backgrounds, and expanded font substitution with support for 28 different international alphabets. New Titling Tools in Premiere Pro. Source: Adobe Users can now upgrade legacy titles. They can be converted into Source Graphics within the Premiere Pro projects. Source Graphics are displayed in the Project panel, where users can track and sort them like any other project item. Premiere Pro 15.4 also introduces label colors and clip names that change the source media on the project panel which can be useful when working on productions. There are also some new color improvements such as tetrahedral LUT interpolation that offers a more precise interpretation of color information for better consistency when grading footage with difficult lighting conditions, such as strong shadows and highlights in the same shot and reducing the chances of introducing banding during post-production. Adobe also brings colorized vectroscope in Premiere Pro (Beta) that provides more detailed image analysis for color grading. Legacy Titles Upgrade in Premiere Pro. Source: Adobe Last but not least, Adobe claims the new Premiere Pro brings some performance improvements such as faster scene detection, automatic audio device switching. The CUDA and OpenCL support on macOS is now discontinued. Team Projects workflow got faster as well. Native Support for Apple M1 Macs The M1 Macs from Apple introduced a different CPU architecture (ARM) than what Intel or AMD CPUs use (x86). That’s why M1 Macs users can either run regular x86 apps over Rosetta emulation or use the native M1 versions that, of course, offer better stability and performance. While some apps had the M1 version ready almost at the launch, other software companies need a bit longer. Adobe started releasing the native M1 Mac versions of its video apps in April 2021 with the Premiere Rush and continued in May with Audition. This July update brings native M1 support for Premiere Pro, Media Encoder, and Character Animator. According to Adobe, After Effects will get the native M1 support in the Public Beta version later this year. The good news is, that After Effects integration features within Premiere Pro, such as Dynamic Link and Motion Graphics templates, have already been optimized for M1 Macs. Adobe states that with native support for M1 on Mac, Premiere Pro runs nearly 80% faster than comparable Intel-based Macs. After Effects (Beta) – Multi-Frame Rendering New Multiframe in After Effects. Source: Adobe With Multi-Frame Rendering, the After Effects architecture can better take advantage of multi-core CPUs for up to 3x faster performance, according to Adobe. The After Effects (Beta) has added Multi-Frame Rendering for Previews, providing faster on-screen rendering and an overall more responsive experience. In addition, with Speculative Rendering, After Effects automatically detects when the system is not active and uses that time to render compositions. Also new in the After Effects Public Beta is the remote notifications for rendering. Character Animator (Beta) – Body Tracker and Puppet Maker New Body Tracker in Character Animator. Source: Adobe Body Tracker feature (in Public Beta) now makes it possible to animate the puppets in the app by using your own body movements and gestures. Users can simply move their bodies in front of a camera and the puppet will move along with them. New Puppet Maker in Character Animator. Source: Adobe Puppet Maker (Public Beta feature) enables quick and diverse character creation for basic users. There are no Photoshop, Illustrator, or rigging skills required. Users can choose from a variety of character styles and then customize them with hairstyles, skin tones, accessories, and more via a simple interface. Price and availability All these new features are available for existing Adobe Creative Cloud subscriptions at no extra cost. The current pricing of the Creative Cloud subscription varies between $10 per month for Premiere rush and $53 per month for all video apps. More information on different plans can be found here. Do you use Adobe Creative Cloud video apps for your work? What do you think about these new features? Let us know in the comments section underneath the article. The post Adobe Creative Cloud July Updates – Premiere Pro and After Effects appeared first on CineD.