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  • Book Overview & Buying Edit without Tears with Final Cut Pro
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Edit without Tears with Final Cut Pro

Edit without Tears with Final Cut Pro

By : Bruce G. Macbryde
4.2 (5)
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Edit without Tears with Final Cut Pro

Edit without Tears with Final Cut Pro

4.2 (5)
By: Bruce G. Macbryde

Overview of this book

Edit Without Tears with Final Cut Pro is your essential guide to overcoming challenges in video editing using Final Cut Pro, simplifying complex procedures and workflows and providing a structured approach for efficient and impressive video editing. This book will change how you approach editing, guiding you to create professional-grade videos with ease and confidence. Throughout the book, you'll enhance your efficiency and speed, while also learning unique workflows for common tasks. The comprehensive coverage spans planning video narratives, crafting preliminary edits and refining them, improving audio quality, setting up and editing multicam sequences, leveraging the inspector's controls, and working with both built-in and third-party plugins. You’ll then advance to animating objects using keyframes, utilizing color scopes for advanced color correction, and troubleshooting common issues confidently. By the end of this Final Cut Pro book, you’ll have developed an efficient editing style, unlocking the full power of this video editing software for your creative endeavors.
Table of Contents (27 chapters)
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Free Chapter
2
Part 1:Planning
7
Part 2:Editing
13
Part 3:Using the Inspector
20
Part 4: Outside Final Cut Pro

What is a keyframe?

Visually, a keyframe appears as a white dot in the audio track in the timeline, yellow when selected (see Figure 13.3), and as an orange diamond in the inspector (see Figure 13.6). A keyframe can also be a white dot in the opacity setting of a video track (Figure 13.1):

Figure 13.1: White keyframe dots showing in the video opacity setting

Figure 13.1: White keyframe dots showing in the video opacity setting

A keyframe can also show as white dots or an orange diamond on a red line when displayed in the viewer, as shown in Figure 13.2:

Figure 13.2: White keyframe dot on a red line in the viewer

Figure 13.2: White keyframe dot on a red line in the viewer

Keyframes all look slightly different and react a little differently, but all represent the same concept. The common factor is that a keyframe is needed to start a change and another keyframe is needed to indicate the end of the change. If you add another keyframe in between, then the added keyframe becomes both the new end point for the original start keyframe and the new start point...

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