Trimming clips – Adobe Premiere Pro CC v.7.xx User Manual

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Trimming clips

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Working with In and Out points
Working with audio clips in the Source Monitor

View audio waveforms
Scrub the audio waveform in the Source Monitor
Zoom in or out on an audio waveform in the Source Monitor

Working with clips in the Source Monitor

Open a clip in the Source Monitor
Open and view recent clips from the Source Monitor
Set In points and Out points in the Source Monitor
Move In point and Out point together
Adjusting edit points in the Source Monitor
Cue to an In point or Out point
Cue to the previous or next edit
Remove source clip In point or Out point

Timeline trimming

Selecting edit points
Performing a Timeline trim
Trim with the selection tool
Trim with the playhead

Making ripple and rolling edits in the Timeline

About ripple and rolling edits
Make a rolling edit using the Rolling Edit tool
Make rolling edits (extend edits) with the playhead
Make a ripple edit using the Ripple Edit tool

Make slip and slide edits

Make a slip edit
Slip a clip with keyboard shortcuts
Make a slide edit
Slide a clip with keyboard shortcuts
Nudging clips
Making split edits

Work in trim mode

Video tutorial: Dynamic Trimming and Editing with the Keyboard
Slip and slide edits in trim mode
Asymmetrical trimming

Work in the Trim Monitor

Open or close the Trim Monitor
Display the edit point you want to trim
Preview the edit in the Trim Monitor
Cancel an edit
Set trim preferences
Make a rolling edit using the Trim Monitor
Make a ripple edit using the Trim Monitor

Trim with Speech Analysis

Working with In and Out points

Setting a clip’s In and Out points is a process called marking. You define the first frame you want to include in a sequence by marking that frame
as the clip’s In point. Then you define the last frame you want to include by marking it as the Out point. In a typical workflow, you mark In and Out
points for a clip in the Source Monitor.

Adjusting a clip's In and Out points after it is already edited into a sequence is called trimming. Typically, you trim clips to adjust how they play
back in a sequence. For example, as you view the edit, you want to cut to the incoming clip a little sooner than you originally planned while
marking clips. To fix that problem, trim the clip using trimming tools in Premiere Pro.

You can trim clips by dragging the edge of a clip. A clip's "edge" is a clip’s In or Out point, or edit point. Several specialized tools and techniques

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