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Edit Like a Pro with iMovie

You're reading from   Edit Like a Pro with iMovie Leverage Apple's free editor for iOS, iPadOS 3.0.1, and macOS 10.3.5 and enrich videos with Keynote animations

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803238906
Length 284 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1 – Get to Know Video Editing
2. Chapter 1: Why and How We Edit Videos FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Automatic and Template Editing with Magic Movie and Storyboards 4. Chapter 3: Using Movie Mode in iOS and iPadOS 5. Part 2 – iMovie for macOS
6. Chapter 4: Understanding iMovie for macOS – Keyboard Shortcuts and the Magnetic Timeline 7. Chapter 5: iMovie Editing Workflow – Import, Edit, and Export 8. Chapter 6: Using iMovie Effects – Overlays and Keyframing 9. Part 3 – Customizing Your Videos
10. Chapter 7: Integrating Keynote – Titles and Animations 11. Chapter 8: Custom Export Formats,ft. Handbrake 12. Chapter 9: Common iMovie Problems and Their Solutions 13. Index 14. Other Books You May Enjoy

Cutaways – introducing overlays in iMovie

An overlay is one clip sitting on top of another. As we know from looking at the magnetic timeline in Chapter 4, overlays in iMovie are treated as connected media, rather than being their own track. This means that overlays:

  • Aren’t attracted to the start of the project
  • Don’t move to the side when you hover a clip over them (in fact, they get overwritten entirely, because you can only have one connected video at a time)

Overlays are available in Movie mode for both iOS/iPadOS and macOS. However, in each version, overlays are added in different ways. Before you add an overlay, you will need a clip in the timeline. Now, here’s how to add a clip as an overlay.

For iOS/iPadOS:

  1. In the Media Browser, tap on the media you want to use as an overlay.
  2. Tap the three dots next to the play icon.
  3. Choose the type of overlay you want to add to the video.

To change the overlay type after...

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