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Avid Media Composer 6.x Cookbook

You're reading from   Avid Media Composer 6.x Cookbook What better way to learn the professional editing possibilities of Avid Media Composer than by trying out practical, real-world examples? This book has over 160 hands-on recipes and guidance covering both basic and advanced techniques.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2012
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849693004
Length 422 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Benjamin Hershleder Benjamin Hershleder
Author Profile Icon Benjamin Hershleder
Benjamin Hershleder
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Avid Media Composer 6.x Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Getting Assets into Your Media Composer Project FREE CHAPTER 2. Customizing Your Work Environment 3. Polishing Gems 4. Creating Split Edits 5. Maintaining and Regaining Sync 6. Managing Your Media Files 7. Mono and Stereo Audio Mixing 8. Editing with Group Clips and MultiCamera Mode 9. Output Tips and Tricks Additional Tips, Tricks, and Explanations Details on Trimming, Slipping, Sliding, and Segment Mode Helpful Details about MultiCamera Editing Index

Editing multiple camera angles without Group Clips


Just for purposes of comparison, let’s examine how we would have to edit without the benefit of Group Clips. Let’s use our previous example of a sit-down interview with one Interviewer and two people being interviewed:

  • Camera A: Interviewer

  • Camera B: Interview Subject 1

  • Camera C: Interview Subject 2

  • Camera D: Roams between a two-Shot of the Interview Subjects and a Wide-Shot that includes both the Interviewer and the Subjects

Without the ability to create Group Clips, you would have at least four video tracks; and you’d have at least two audio tracks (presuming the interviewer was recorded on one audio channel, while both subjects were recorded together on a different channel). Likely you’d have at least three audio tracks in this situation (each person recorded on a different audio channel), and possibly a fourth that was recorded with all the cameras’ audio channels mixed into one (as a safety/reference). In the Sequence, the video would be stacked onto different tracks and placed in sync with each other. You might configure the stacked clips like this (depending on your own preferences):

  • V1: Camera A

  • V2: Camera B

  • V3: Camera C

  • V4: Camera D

While editing like this is not impossible (there are a couple of different methods you might use, though I won’t bother you with detailing them), it is a great deal slower and more cumbersome than using Group Clips, whether you’re using MultiCamera Mode or not.

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