P. 257) – Apple Final Cut Express HD User Manual

Page 257

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Chapter 19

Creating Subclips

257

V

Automatically Creating Subclips Using DV Start/Stop Detection

DV formats allow you to create subclips automatically from start/stop metadata that is
embedded in video frames each time you stop and start the camcorder. This DV start/
stop metadata is captured and stored in the media file. Final Cut Express HD can identify
the location of each start/stop marker (sometimes referred to as an embedded flag) to
automatically place markers in a clip. These markers can then be used to create subclips.

Note: DV start/stop metadata is not timecode. It is independent time-of-day metadata
recorded within the video data of your footage. When the time-of-day information
jumps dramatically from one shot to the next, Final Cut Express HD recognizes that the
shot has changed and can place a marker at that point in the clip.

To break a long DV clip into subclips based on starts and stops:

1

Capture a long clip from a DV tape containing several starts and stops.

2

Do one of the following:

 Select the clip in the Browser.
 Open the clip in the Viewer.

3

With the Viewer active, choose Mark > DV Start/Stop Detect.

Note: If you have any exceptionally long clips, you can break these up further by
adding a few more markers manually. For more information, see “

Using Markers

” on

page 235.

4

Switch the Browser to list view and locate the clip you were working on in the Viewer.

For more information, see “

Choosing Views in the Browser

” on page 70.

5

Click the disclosure triangle to view the clip’s markers.

If you want to give any of the markers a more descriptive name, simply click the marker
in the Browser, then click the marker’s name to select it. You can now change the name.

Markers for a clip

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