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Final Cut Pro Efficient Editing

You're reading from   Final Cut Pro Efficient Editing The ultimate guide to editing video with FCP 10.7.1 for faster, smarter workflows

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837631674
Length 828 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Iain Anderson Iain Anderson
Author Profile Icon Iain Anderson
Iain Anderson
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Table of Contents (23) Chapters Close

Preface PART 1: Importing and Organizing
1 Quick Start: An Introduction to FCP FREE CHAPTER 2 Before the Edit: Production Tips 3 Bring It In: Importing Your Footage 4 Sort It Out: Reviewing and Keywording 5 Choose Your Favorites: Selecting, Rating, and Searching PART 2: Rough Cut to Fine Cut
6 Build the spine of the story: Quick Assembly 7 Cover It Up: Connections, Cutaways, and Storylines 8 Neaten the Edges: Trimming Techniques 9 Consider Your Options: Multicam, Replacing, and Auditions 10 Explore a Little: Compound Clips and Timeline Tricks PART 3: Finishing and Exporting
11 Play with Light: Color Correction and Grading 12 Refine and Smooth: Video Properties and Effects 13 Blend and Warp: Video Transitions and Retiming 14 Boost the Signal: Audio Sweetening 15 A Few Words: Titles and Generators 16 You’re Done: Exporting Your Edit and Finishing Up Other Books You May Enjoy Index Appendix A: 360° Video Workflows

Low-level relinking

Many editors don’t like to get down and dirty with the raw media. In fact, the longer you’ve been in the industry, the more likely you are to have assistant editors to take care of all those details for you. But if you edit videos outside the traditional video and film bubble, you’re probably doing it all yourself, and sometimes, circumstances require you to get your hands dirty.

Containers (Multicam and Compound Clips) give you flexibility, but using them requires planning upfront: you have to make the container first, and then edit with it. If you didn’t make a container, do you have to manually replace every clip? Not necessarily: you can relink one clip to point at a different source clip if the two files are very similar.

Relinking to replace a clip

Relinking is a way to replace media behind the scenes, allowing you to point a clip to a different source file. However, this is only assured to work if the new clip and old...

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