Adobe Premiere Pro 2023 New Features Jun 2026
Adobe Premiere Pro has long been the industry standard for video editing, but until 2023, many users felt the software was stagnating. Competing with faster, more intuitive tools like DaVinci Resolve and Final Cut Pro, Adobe needed a comeback year. And 2023 was exactly that: a transformative period for Premiere Pro.
and it's now an Adobe company so now from the workspaces. if you go to review. you have the Frame.io. and you get a free Frame.io. YouTube·Premiere Gal Text-Based Video Editing In Premiere Pro 2023 Update adobe premiere pro 2023 new features
Adobe Premiere Pro 2023 builds on previous releases with performance improvements, smarter AI-powered workflows, and tighter multiformat editing tools aimed at speeding up editing, color grading, and collaboration. Key additions focus on Generative AI, improved proxies and media management, refined color workflows, and better integration across Adobe apps. Adobe Premiere Pro has long been the industry
: After years of requests, editors can finally add multiple inner, outer, or center strokes to text directly in the Essential Graphics panel . and it's now an Adobe company so now from the workspaces
: New tools allow you to align text and shape elements with one click directly in the Program Monitor. 3. Smarter Audio Tools
This feature solved a major pain point for editors working with mixed media (e.g., mixing SDR stock footage with HDR log footage).
Excellent case. A few months before this was published, I met Lee Ranaldo at a film he was presenting and I brought this album for him to sign. Lee said it was his “favorite” Sonic Youth album, and (no surprise) it’s mine too, which is why I brought it.
For the record, I love and own nearly every studio album they released, so it’s not a mere preference for a particular stage of their career – it’s simply the one that came out on top.
Nice appreciative analysis of Sonic Youth’s strongest and most artistic ’90s album. I dug a little deeper in my analysis (‘Beyond SubUrbia: A View Through the Trees’), but I think my Gen-x perspective demanded that.