EditingTools.io has released QuickSweep, a plugin panel for Adobe Premiere Pro that focuses on cleaning up project-bin clutter by automatically categorising items into a chosen bin structure, a productivity plugin intended to eliminate project clutter and sort assets into the project bin structure.
EditingTools.io has released QuickSweep, a productivity plugin for Adobe Premiere Pro that automatically categorises loose project items into your chosen bin structure.
QuickSweep sorts using metadata, file extensions, and smart keyword scoring. Its detection targets Sequences and Nests, Video Footage, Graphics and Stills, SFX, and Music. You set where each category should land through Bin Mapping, and a Sync button refreshes the bin list. If you want it to keep cleaning while you work, Auto-Sweep runs in the background every four seconds. When something goes walkabout, a Moved Items log tracks what was moved and offers a Reveal action that loads the item in the Source Monitor.
Online / Offline
QuickSweep is designed to work offline, stores its configuration locally, and states it shares no data with any AI service. It also states it does not share project data with EditingTools.io, with one clearly described exception: using an Upload to EditingTools.io feature uploads metadata from the collected list to your personal EditingTools.io account. You can have that if you want, but Quicksweep works offline as well.
Compatibility is Premiere Pro CC 2022+ on Windows and macOS. The OS baseline named in the FAQ is Windows 10 and macOS 12 Montery. Installation uses a ZXP workflow, with ZXP Installer or Anastasiy Extension Manager suggested. The panel appears in Premiere Pro under Window > Extensions > QuickSweep.
Licensing is perpetual. EditingTools.io offers single-user, team, and enterprise licensing, with team licensing starting at three licences. Checkout is handled via Paddle as Merchant of Record, and single-user purchase is also listed via the Adobe Exchange Store. New tools and innovations should be tested before use in production, ideally on duplicate projects, because automation is only funny until it rearranges the wrong bin.