Minimal Titles by ToresMotion, a clean full screen Premiere Pro MOGRT title template. Download on Artlist.
Download FREEDownload NOW!Download On Artlist
A full screen title needs to do something genuinely different from a lower third or a call-out, it needs to command the entire frame for a brief moment without feeling heavy handed about it. Minimal Titles, made by ToresMotion and available through Artlist, is built specifically for this role, clean, understated full screen text designed to introduce a new section, chapter, or topic, delivered as a Premiere Pro Motion Graphics Template ready to drop directly into your timeline.
If you're building this into a broader chaptered or multi section video, our Premiere Pro Shortcuts guide is genuinely useful here, since navigating between multiple sections efficiently speeds up placing and adjusting title cards across a longer timeline. For music with the kind of clean, professional energy that pairs naturally with minimal title cards, Artlist carries a genuinely strong selection well suited to this exact tone.
Exact resolution, clip count, and file size were not independently confirmed at the time of writing beyond the product's confirmed identity. Confirm these specific details directly on the live product page before finalizing a project around exact delivery requirements.
A full screen title genuinely commands different attention than a lower third does. Where a lower third sits quietly in the corner of an ongoing shot, supporting the content without interrupting it, a full screen title takes over the entire frame momentarily, signaling a genuine transition, a new chapter beginning, a new topic starting, or a meaningful shift in the content's direction. This distinction matters for choosing the right tool for the right moment, using a full screen title for something that doesn't genuinely warrant that level of interruption can feel disproportionate, while relying only on smaller graphic elements for a moment that genuinely needs a clear, unmistakable transition can leave a viewer without the clear structural signposting longer content genuinely benefits from.
Minimal Titles earns its place specifically by handling this transitional moment with restraint, communicating a genuine shift without resorting to elaborate, attention seeking animation that could feel mismatched against otherwise understated content.
Head to the Artlist download page and grab the MOGRT file.
In Premiere Pro, go to Window, then Essential Graphics, and use the Browse tab to install your downloaded template.
Drag the specific title style you want to use directly onto your timeline at the appropriate transitional moment.
Switch to the Edit tab within Essential Graphics and replace the existing copy with your specific section title, keeping it genuinely concise for maximum visual impact.
Use the Edit tab's color controls to fit your specific brand palette while preserving the template's clean, minimal character.
Play back your timeline to confirm your title reads clearly and transitions smoothly before committing to a final export.
Once satisfied, export your finished sequence using your project's standard export settings.
For a genuinely useful walkthrough of working with title MOGRTs directly inside Premiere Pro, watch After Effects Lower Third Animation And Essential Graphics Tutorial, which covers how Essential Graphics works as the bridge between motion graphics templates and your actual Premiere Pro timeline. This is worth watching specifically because understanding this bridge clarifies exactly what you can and cannot adjust directly within Premiere Pro without needing After Effects at all.
Courses and tutorials divided into distinct sections benefit considerably from clear, minimal title cards marking each new chapter or topic.
Documentaries structured around distinct segments benefit from title cards that signal genuine transitions without feeling heavy handed.
Business content divided into distinct sections benefits from professional, understated section titles that maintain a considered tone throughout.
Content compiling multiple distinct segments or topics benefits from clear title cards helping viewers track where one segment ends and another begins.
Creative professionals presenting multiple distinct projects within a single reel benefit from minimal title cards clearly separating each individual piece of work.
Since this template shares a creator and a consistent minimal design language with both Minimal Lower Thirds and Minimal Call-Outs, installing all three MOGRTs into a single Premiere Pro project produces a considerably more polished, professionally unified final result than sourcing each individual graphic type from entirely different, visually inconsistent sources. A viewer, even without consciously noticing the specific design choices at play, genuinely registers this kind of underlying visual consistency as a marker of overall production quality and considered planning.
Since full screen titles display text at a considerably larger scale than lower thirds or call-outs, font choice matters even more here than it does for those smaller graphic elements. Testing your specific chosen font directly at the actual scale this template displays it on your Program Monitor, rather than judging it purely from a smaller preview, catches any spacing or legibility issues before they become a genuine problem in your finished, exported output.
Since full screen titles occupy the entire frame, it's worth confirming this template's specific text positioning and scale translate cleanly across different aspect ratios if your project needs both a standard widescreen sequence and a vertical sequence for social platforms. Testing your chosen title directly within your actual intended delivery format in Premiere Pro, rather than assuming a single design translates automatically, avoids discovering a legibility or composition issue only after the rest of your project has already been built around it.
For projects genuinely aiming for a broadcast quality feel, it's worth thinking about how this title fits within a broader visual system rather than existing as an isolated graphic element. Using this template's color and font choices as the actual foundation for your broader project's graphic identity across every MOGRT installed in your Essential Graphics panel produces a considerably more polished, professionally considered final result.
Using overly long text that loses impact at full screen scale. Keep section titles genuinely brief for the strongest visual impression.
Overusing full screen titles for transitions that don't genuinely warrant them. Reserve this level of visual interruption for moments that actually represent a meaningful shift in content.
Rushing the title's timing to fit an overly tight edit. A full screen title specifically depends on a moment of genuine pause to achieve its intended structural, signposting effect.
Forgetting the template is a MOGRT rather than a native project file. All customization happens through Essential Graphics directly in Premiere Pro.
Beyond individual styling decisions, it's worth thinking about how full screen titles like this one function structurally within a longer piece of content overall. Genuinely well placed section titles do real work helping a viewer mentally organize longer content into digestible segments, considerably improving comprehension and retention compared to content that flows without any clear internal structure signposted visually.
As with any Artlist asset, reviewing the current license terms before using this template within paid client or commercial work is worth doing upfront, particularly for educational and corporate training content where licensing clarity carries genuine weight.
Minimal Titles gives Premiere Pro editors a genuinely dependable way to signal meaningful transitions within longer content, filling a structural role distinct from both lower thirds and call-outs. Understanding when a full screen title genuinely earns its place, and pairing this MOGRT thoughtfully with its broader design family for genuine visual consistency, gets you the most value from this asset across educational content, documentaries, and any project benefiting from clear, considered internal structure.
Full screen titles suit genuine transitions, new chapters, sections, or topics, while lower thirds suit ongoing supporting information without interrupting the current shot.
No, it's built as a Premiere Pro Motion Graphics Template, fully editable within the Essential Graphics panel.
Multi chapter educational content, documentaries, corporate training videos, and portfolio reels all genuinely benefit from clear, minimal section titles.
Reserve them for moments that genuinely represent a meaningful content shift, overusing full screen titles for minor transitions can feel disproportionate.
Yes, and it's genuinely worth doing, since all three share a consistent visual language that produces a more unified, professional looking finished project.
Affiliate Disclosure: This post may contain affiliate links. If you make a purchase through one of these links, FreeVisuals may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend products and platforms we genuinely believe in. Read our full disclosure policy.