- Stock Contributor User guide
- Why contribute to Adobe Stock
- Create and manage your account
- Legal guidelines
- Content requirements
- Content Policy: Artist Names, real known people, fictional characters
- Vector requirements
- Single icons and icon sheets
- Video requirements
- Generative AI requirements
- PNG files with transparency requirements
- Illustrative editorial requirements
- Motion graphics templates requirements
- Design template requirements
- Premium and 3D collections
- Diverse and Inclusive content guidelines
- Photo and illustration requirements
- Prepare and upload your content
- Describe your content effectively
- Review process
- Payment and taxes
Review our tips for getting all your videos accepted to our collection.
You’ve shot some great footage and now it’s time to make your selections and edit your videos to submit to Adobe Stock. The following tips were put together to help you submit videos we can license to customers. There are no hard-fast rules, but these do’s and don’ts provide some good guidelines at each stage.
Adobe Premiere Pro offers multiple export preset options specifically designed for Adobe Stock Contributors. Find out where they are and how to use them HERE.
Cutting
Do: Make clean cuts so that your video doesn’t start on a separate clip.
Do: Create short clips separating out each take. We accept footage ranging from 5 to 60 seconds in duration and recommend 10-20 seconds.
Do: Leave edit handles at the beginning and end of video clips—we recommend 1-5 seconds.
Do: Cut out camera adjustments like focusing and zooming.
Adjustments
Do: Process your video subtly: clean color footage that is in focus sells well.
Don’t: Over sharpen—too much sharpening can bring out noise and unwanted texture.
Don’t: Increase the contrast drastically—this can introduce noise and you may lose detail.
Preview images
Do: Be aware that your video's preview image will be automatically selected from a frame 5 seconds into the video.
Color correction
Do: Adjust levels, curves, or brightness/contrast to ensure the best tonal range.
Don’t: Oversaturate—if you want to push colors hard for a specific aesthetic, use a secondary color corrector or the Vibrance control in Premiere Pro’s Lumetri color grading panel.
Don’t: Submit uncorrected logarithmic gamma (log) footage. Footage shot in log should have a simple color grading applied—a basic Rec 709 LUT is recommended.
Effects
Don’t: Add vignettes or other effects unless they really add to the shot.
Don’t: Create a video from still images. Timelapse or stop motion videos are the exception.
Audio
Do: Preserve ambient sound if the quality is acceptable.
Do: Obtain model releases from all identifiable speakers, or remove the audio.
Do: Remove audio that is unusable, such as over-modulated audio or sound that could be trademarked. It is perfectly acceptable to submit clips without audio.
Don’t: Add music or sound effects.
Variations
Don’t: Submit shots that are only marginally different or different due to post-production effects. Make sure each submission offers something unique to the customer.
Submitting
Don’t: Up-res footage (for example, from HD to 4k). Submit footage as shot or smaller, if necessary.