Superimposing clips – Apple Final Cut Pro 5 User Manual

Page 501

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166

Part II

Rough Editing

5

Do one of the following:

 Drag the clip from the Viewer to the Replace section of the Edit Overlay in the Canvas.
 Click the Replace button in the Canvas.
 Press F11.

The selected area in the sequence is replaced by the source clip. Final Cut Pro
automatically calculates the clip duration.

Superimposing Clips

In some cases, you may want to place one clip directly above another clip in a different
track. This is called a superimpose edit. You can use a superimpose edit to quickly stack
a source clip on top of a clip already in your sequence. If there isn’t an available track in
your sequence, Final Cut Pro creates a new one for the source clip.

Superimpose edits obey the standard rules of three-point editing, except that if no In
or Out points have been specified in the Canvas or Timeline, the position of the
playhead in the Timeline is not used as a default In point. Instead, the clip that
intersects the position of the playhead in the current destination track provides the In
and Out points for the source clip (as it does when you use the Mark Clip command).

You can set the In and Out points in the Canvas or Timeline so that the superimpose
edit spans multiple clips, as long as there’s enough media in your source clip to cover
the specified area.

Before a replace edit

After a replace edit

New clip replaces the
selected area of the
sequence.

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