Learning about trimming clips, What is trimming – Apple Final Cut Pro 7 User Manual

Page 715

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This chapter covers the following:

What Is Trimming?

(p. 715)

Controls That Affect Trim Edits

(p. 717)

Selecting Edits and Clips to Trim

(p. 718)

Trimming with the Selection Tool

(p. 721)

Extending and Shortening Clips in the Timeline

(p. 723)

Trimming Clips in the Viewer

(p. 724)

Precision Editing Using Timecode

(p. 726)

Understanding Alert Messages When Trimming

(p. 728)

Adjusting a clip’s duration by moving its In or Out point, or moving the edit point between
two clips, is called trimming.

What Is Trimming?

After you have roughly assembled your clips in chronological order in a sequence, you
begin to fine-tune the cut point (or edit point) between each clip. Any time you make a
clip in a sequence longer or shorter, you are trimming that clip. However, trimming
generally refers to precision adjustments (anywhere from one frame to several seconds).
If you are adjusting clip durations by much larger amounts, you are still trimming, but
you may not be in the fine-tuning phase of editing yet.

Getting an edit to work is an intuitive process, so you need to watch the results of your
trimming adjustments repeatedly as you trim. Many factors go into the decision of when
exactly you cut from one shot to the next. When you fine-tune your sequence, you are
no longer focused on the larger structure of the movie, but how each shot flows to the
next. You focus on individual edit points between clips instead of large groups of clips.
In most cases, you aim to achieve a certain visual and psychological continuity.

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Learning About Trimming Clips

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