Manual
Table Of Contents
- Contents
- Chapter 1: What’s new in Final Cut Pro?
- Chapter 2: Final Cut Pro basics
- Chapter 3: Import media
- Chapter 4: Analyze media
- Chapter 5: Organize your library
- Chapter 6: Play back and skim media
- Chapter 7: Edit your project
- Editing overview
- Create and manage projects
- Select clips and ranges
- Add and remove clips
- Adding clips overview
- Drag clips to the Timeline
- Append clips to your project
- Insert clips in your project
- Connect clips to add cutaway shots, titles, and synchronized sound effects
- Overwrite parts of your project
- Replace a clip in your project with another clip
- Add and edit still images
- Create freeze frames
- Add clips using video-only or audio-only mode
- Remove clips from your project
- Solo, disable, and enable clips
- Find a Timeline clip’s source clip
- Arrange clips in the Timeline
- Cut and trim clips
- View and navigate
- Work with markers
- Correct excessive shake and rolling shutter issues
- Chapter 8: Edit audio
- Chapter 9: Add transitions, titles, effects, and generators
- Transitions, titles, effects, and generators overview
- Add and adjust transitions
- Transitions overview
- How transitions are created
- Set transition defaults
- Add transitions to your project
- Delete transitions from your project
- Adjust transitions in the Timeline
- Adjust transitions in the Transition inspector and Viewer
- Adjust transitions with multiple images
- Create specialized versions of transitions in Motion
- Add and adjust titles
- Adjust built-in effects
- Add and adjust clip effects
- Add generators
- About themes
- Use onscreen controls
- Use the Video Animation Editor
- Chapter 10: Advanced editing
- Group clips with compound clips
- Add storylines
- Fine-tune edits with the Precision Editor
- Create split edits
- Make three-point edits
- Try out clips using auditions
- Retime clips to create speed effects
- Conform frame sizes and frame rates
- Use roles to manage clips
- Use XML to transfer projects and events
- Edit with multicam clips
- Multicam editing overview
- Multicam editing workflow
- Import media for a multicam edit
- Assign camera names and multicam angles
- Create multicam clips in the Browser
- Cut and switch angles in the Angle Viewer
- Sync and adjust angles and clips in the Angle Editor
- Edit multicam clips in the Timeline and the Inspector
- Multicam editing tips and tricks
- Chapter 11: Keying and compositing
- Chapter 12: Color correction
- Chapter 13: Share your project
- Chapter 14: Manage media, libraries, and archives
- Chapter 15: Preferences and metadata
- Chapter 16: Keyboard shortcuts and gestures
- Glossary
Chapter 10 Advancedediting 283
Createsplitedits
Final Cut Pro allows you to set separate video and audio start and end points in an individual
clip. These edits, known as split edits, can be used in many dierent situations—in dialogue
scenes, when cutting to illustrative B-roll footage during an interview, or when transitioning from
one scene to another.
You can use a split edit to introduce the sound of a new shot or scene before cutting to the
video of that shot or scene. Conversely, you can use a split edit to extend the audio of a shot
over a subsequent shot. For example, you could cut from a clip of a person talking to video of a
person listening, while the audio from the rst clip continues.
The split edit technique results in L-shaped and J-shaped clips with audio extending to the left
or the right. These are known as L-cuts and J-cuts.
Note: Whenever you use split edits in a project, it’s recommended that you choose View >
Expand Audio/Video Clips > For Splits (so that there’s a checkmark next to the menu item). This
setting provides you with the most accurate display of all your split edits.
Create a split edit by dragging
To create the split edit, you extend the audio of one clip over a neighboring clip. In this example,
the audio from the close-up of the man is extended over the close-up of the woman to create a
J-cut.
1 Add clips to the Timeline in the order in which you want them to appear in your movie.
2 To show separate audio for the clip you want to edit, do one of the following:
•
In the Timeline, select the clip whose audio you want to expand, and choose Clip > Expand
Audio/Video (or press Control-S).
•
Double-click the clip’s audio waveform.
The audio and video portions of the clip appear as discrete components that you can change
individually. They are still attached and will remain in sync.
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