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Camera Pack
3D Slideshow Style Transitions
Retrostyle Screen TV
New
VHS Elements Presets
Glitch Freeze Effects

Glitch Freeze Effects

Playground Studio
3D Screen

3D Screen

VideoMaker
Thermal Acid FX
Parallax Zoom Transitions
Defocus Text Animator
Film And Video Mattes

Film And Video Mattes

Playground Studio
Pixel Art
Dark Horror Transitions
Speed Ramp Transitions
Liquid Glass Frames
Bad Scan Effect
Flare Text Animation
Distorted Glass
Old Film Effect

Old Film Effect

Alexey_P
Out There Optics Presets
Energy Beat

Energy Beat

Animark
Universal Light Leaks
Animated Shadow Effects
Typewriter Text

Typewriter Text

VideoMaker
Film Burn Effects

Film Burn Effects

Bobjackson
RGB Glow Transitions

RGB Glow Transitions

Playground Studio
New Double Exposure Effect
Urban Intro Transitions
Jiggle Text

Jiggle Text

tarazz
Stretch Text FX
VHS Colors

VHS Colors

Tibasov
Interference Effect
8mm Film Effects
Bokeh Light Presets
Retro Leaks Transitions
Bulge Push Transitions

Bulge Push Transitions

MotionThunder
Retro Cinema Title Presets
Stretch Glitch Transitions
Split Screens - 4 Frame
Flash Effects

Flash Effects

Bobjackson
Pulsation Effects

Pulsation Effects

Motion Jungle
Paper Split Screens
Pulse Neon Text
Zoom Effects

Zoom Effects

Typoland
Glass & Blur Transitions Presets
Minimal Lower Thirds
Camera Viewfinder Transitions
Pixel Distortion Effects Presets
Ripped Frame Transitions
Neon Darkness Effects

Neon Darkness Effects

Playground Studio
Jiggle Pop Titles

Jiggle Pop Titles

MotionThunder
Color To B&W

Color To B&W

VideoMaker
Morph Glitch Transition
8BitMe - Pixelate Overlays
Glamour Effect

Glamour Effect

Alexey_P
Bokeh Light Generator V1
Glass Effects

Glass Effects

Animark
Halftone Effects
Quick Channel Transitions & FX
Fire Elements

Fire Elements

Lord Varan
Stomp Titles - Overlay Transitions

What are Adobe presets?

Premiere Pro presets are predefined, customizable settings that you can apply to any video while editing. They help you achieve professional effects quickly and easily. Instead of having to manually change the settings each time, you can simply drag and drop your chosen preset onto your video clip in Premiere Pro — and you’re done!

The difference between Premiere Pro templates and presets is that templates are complete projects (that can also be customized), whereas presets are a series of predefined settings or effects.

There are many different kinds of Premiere Pro presets. Some of the most popular ones include text effects, transitions, color grades and LUTs.

How to use a preset in Premiere Pro

The beauty of presets is that they’re surprisingly easy to use. Once you’ve found your preset of choice, download it and open up Adobe Premiere Pro. Next, navigate to the Effects window, right-click on top of the ‘Presets’ folder and select ‘Import Presets...’. A window will pop up. Select the preset and click ‘Open’.

Your installed presets will appear under the Presets folder, located inside the Effects window. To apply your preset in Premiere Pro, simply drag and drop it onto the relevant video clip and watch the magic happen.
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