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Final Cut Pro X Cookbook

You're reading from   Final Cut Pro X Cookbook Edit with style and ease using the latest editing technologies in Final Cut Pro X! with this book and ebook.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2012
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849692960
Length 452 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Jason Cox Jason Cox
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Jason Cox
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Final Cut Pro X Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Importing Your Media FREE CHAPTER 2. Customizing Your Workflow 3. Basic Editing Mechanics 4. Enhancing Your Editing 5. Sweetening and Fixing Your Sound 6. Practical Magic a.k.a Useful Effects 7. Titles, Transitions, and Generators 8. Get Your Movie to Move 9. Altering the Aesthetics of Your Image 10. Getting Your Project Out of FCPX Working with Motion and Compressor

Importing and working with layered Photoshop files


Importing a standard photograph or image file is a very straightforward process, covered in the Importing a still image recipe. But what about when you've created a complex Photoshop file with multiple layers? Luckily, it's just as easy to import .psd files into FCPX as any other media file, but FCPX has to handle such a file a bit differently in order to accommodate the multiple levels of a layered file.

Getting ready

Layering in Photoshop has been around for many, many years so you don't need any specific version of the program to create one of these files. In this exercise, we created a very simple layered file of a slightly overlapping red, green, and blue circle. You can create a similar file as well, or use your own creation. When you've created your layered image, simply save the file in the standard .psd format. Do not export it as a JPEG, TIFF, or any other image format or it will flatten your image!

You don't need to have Photoshop installed on your machine in order for FCPX to import and handle .psd files, so if a client sends you a .psd via email, you're still able to work with it in FCPX!

How to do it...

  1. 1. As always, highlight the Event you want to import the file into, and choose File | Import | Files.... Find your .psd file or files wherever they may be and choose Import.

  2. 2. The files appear in your event. In this case, we have imported two identical looking .psd files of a simple red, blue, and green circle. One file contains layers and the other was flattened. Note that the flattened .psd file appears with a standard image icon while the layered version has an icon indicating that the file has been turned into a compound clip:

  3. 3. Edit the layered file/compound clip into a timeline of your choosing. In this case we will place it in an empty timeline. It still looks like one clip, but that's the trick to get compound clips—it appears as one, but secretly houses numerous media clips inside:

  4. 4. Double-click on the clip. Voila! We have loaded the compound clip into its own timeline and now see all the layers as individual clips stacked on top of one another. We can treat each layer as a regular clip and tweak it however we like!

  5. 5. Let's make the red circle larger. Click on the red circle clip in the timeline. Then click on the Transform button under the Unified Viewer. Resizable corner handles appear on the red circle.

  6. 6. Click and hold on one of the blue corner handles and drag away from the circle. The circle will get larger:

  7. 7. Maybe we want to delete a layer entirely. Click on the green circle clip in the timeline and hit Delete. The green circle disappears. Click on the back arrow Timeline History button to return to your main timeline:

There's more...

Background layers

Unless you consciously deleted it or changed settings in Photoshop before saving, chances are your .psd file will have a white background. When you import it into FCPX, that white background will still be there, but luckily, it's just a layer and can be deleted easily.

See also

For more detail on the Transform tool mentioned in this recipe, read the Using the Transform tool recipe in the Chapter 8, Get Your Movie to Move. To learn more about compound clips, read the recipe Grouping clips together as a compound clip in Chapter 4, Enhance Your Editing.

You have been reading a chapter from
Final Cut Pro X Cookbook
Published in: Oct 2012
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781849692960
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