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  • Hello, everyone, and welcome to the class. This is David A. Cox with techtalkamerica.com,

  • and today were talking all about Final Cut Pro X. I always like to reference the

  • date when I teach these classes, because as time goes on, things do change.

  • Today’s date is September 5th of 2015. Were going to be covering a lot of different aspects

  • of Final Cut Pro. This is a very, very large piece of software to cover. My goal is to

  • give you all the information you need to get started. This is really designed for people

  • who are new to new-ish on the user level. If you haven’t already done so, you can

  • purchase Final Cut Pro X through the Mac App Store.

  • That would bejust go to the little Apple icon, go to App Store. You can purchase it

  • there. For anyone who complains about the price, I want to remind you that Final Cut

  • used to be $2,000. It has come down significantly since then. It's a great piece of software.

  • I use it all the time. I've been using different versions of it for over 10 years, now. I originally

  • trained myself in video editing when I was about 14 years old. Back in those days, it

  • was the Media 100 System, and then eventually, Final Cut, et cetera.

  • We're going to go over all that today. For those of you tuning in after we record this,

  • since we do have a live audience now, I want to give you a strong recommendation before

  • you play the rest of this class. In the description of this video, I’m giving you all a PDF

  • that I’ve made up for you. It has a ton of different shortcuts and hyperlinks for

  • product that I recommend for people getting into video production. My degree is in film

  • making, so this is something I have definitely had plenty of time to play with over the last

  • many years.

  • If you need recommendations as far as what kind of hard drive to keep your footage onthat’s

  • one of the things I tend to recommend. Keep your footage on an external hard drive. You

  • can see my recommendations there. There's all sorts of lighting and sound equipment,

  • different digital cameras that you can use. All that youll find, of course, in that

  • PDF. Look for that in the description.

  • First thing I want to talk about when you get into video editing—I have a very strong

  • recommendationkeep your footage organized and on an external hard drive. For those who

  • are curious, I'll drag it into the screen I am actually legit when I talk about this.

  • This is my little hard drive. I have a Drobo Mini. I stand by this product even though

  • it is more expensive than most. It has four hard drives in it. It is basically massaging

  • your data between four different drives. If one drive fails, you pop it out and pop in

  • a new one. It rebuilds everything. It is expandable. They're just awesome. There's a few versions

  • of the Drobo. The Drobo Mini is the one I like because it’s so easily portable, so

  • when I travel, which I’m doing more and more these days for business. It comes with

  • a bag. I can bring it with me. Definitely check that out.

  • What I’ve done today iswe're going to be creating a little video. It won't be of

  • significant content. I tagged a few video files to show you how to navigate this.

  • When you go into Final Cut it will look something like this. Your screen might look a little

  • different, you might not have that open, but I want to walk you through everything here.

  • Let's go through basic definitions. When you start Final Cut you'll need to create a few

  • things. I'll go to File and New. You'll see the three major items: Project, Event and

  • Library. These can be very confusing. Trust me. I've been confused by them in the past.

  • The project is straightforward. It’s whatever the edit is.

  • I might be doing this video for this and another video for that. Sometimes I do two different

  • versions of something that will be separate projects. Next, is the event. This is the

  • best way to describe it. Let's say you're shooting a movie. Each event might be a different

  • scene. You can pull footage from different events into one project. The library contains

  • multiple events. I know that can be a little confusing. I want to go over what that is.

  • The first thing we do whenbecause were starting new here, I’m going to create a

  • new project. I'm going to call this "Demo."

  • You can see up here that it has this little clapboard. If you're going through with multiple

  • projects, this is the icon you look for to double click to pull up the edit itself. What

  • it has done is create an event here that we can use to bring in our footage. Please keep

  • your footage on an external drive.

  • Normally, what you would do to bring in footage is you go to File and Import, and you would

  • just tell it where it is. If you have a digital camera, plug it in to Final Cut Pro for it

  • to go to that screen and ask which clips you want to bring in and where to put them. I'm

  • going to cheat a little here because this is a demo class. I have created some quick

  • clips here that I'll drag and drop here into this event, which another way that you can

  • technically do it.

  • I like to use different terminology than what Apple puts out to make it easier to follow.

  • I refer to this as my bin. It is everything, all the footage. I'm going to mute the audio.

  • This is all of my footage. As you skim over it with your cursor, you will see a preview

  • in the preview window at the top right corner. Now, the bottom portion here is the time line.

  • That is where the edit takes place. When youre go through Apple's resources, ifyou should

  • go through Apple’s resourcessometimes it’s referred to as timeline, sometimes

  • it’s storyline. They are, technically speaking, different. I'm trying to make this easier.

  • I am just going to use the word timeline today. For any experts who are wondering why I'm

  • using wrong terminology, it's because I'm trying not to confuse people here.

  • The first thing you'll do when you go through your footage is pull the best shots. If you're

  • curious and haven't heard of me before, I have this hobby of using an aerial drone.

  • I do a lot of drone films. If you're curious about them, you can go on Facebook and search

  • for "Droning Province town." That's where we are. You can find my videos there. I try

  • to put out a video each week if I'm fortunate enough, especially during the summer.

  • What you'll do is go through here to pick out your best shots. Bring them to your timeline.

  • I'll give you some shortcuts to make this easier. The first thing is when you're skimming

  • through footage and find the perfect place, you'll want to play it. Hitting the space

  • bar will play it. There is audio on this clip. This is the only shot not with the drone.

  • I'll wait for the perfect moment with some seagulls in here. At that point, I'll tell

  • it what my in point is. To mark the in point, hit the letter "I". Think in equals I.

  • You get that little yellow box. Now what I’m going to do is I'm going to play the footage

  • to figure out how long the shot will go. When I find the stopping point, I'll hit the letter

  • "O". O as in out point. It is showing me, of this clip, this part here, which I have

  • tagged as being a good shot. Now, I'm going to bring it into the time line. There's a

  • couple ways to do it. You can drag and drop it if you want. I like to use hotkeys and

  • shortcut keys.

  • There are three keys that work to do this. Personally, I only use one. For organization

  • purposes I find this to be better. Keep in mind that I don't shoot with actors, so I'm

  • not worried about things matching up correctly. The three letters are Q, W and E. For those

  • of you on an American keyboard, those are next to each other. The one that I use more

  • than anything is E because it puts it at the end of your project. You can see it’s now

  • right here at the end of my timeline. It's the first shot, so the end and beginning is

  • the same shot.

  • The other options here are W. I'll zoom in here. If you have a track pad, you can pinch

  • with your fingers, just like you would zoom in on Safari. If I use W, it will put it where

  • this little bar is. That is the playhead. That will interrupt the shot if it's not between

  • two shots. I'll do undo to clear it out. A good hot key to be aware of on the MAC is

  • undo, which is Command Z as in zebra. The other option is Q. Q is good for dealing with

  • interviews. I'll try to paint the picture.

  • You watch an interview with someone on camera. They go to what is called B Roll footage,

  • which is something else like them walking through a park. You still hear their audio.

  • This is an example where Q can be useful. Check it out. It puts it above the shot. If

  • this clip had no audio, you would still hear the audio from this shot here. I'll show you

  • how to tweak audio in a little bit. The big one I tend to use more than anything is E.

  • It puts it at the end of the project for me to manipulate later on.

  • In order for me to show you the editing I'll put in a few other shots. Let me find a good

  • shot. I for in point. Let’s hit play. Give it a few seconds of footage. Scroll down to

  • get a few other shots. The aerial drone is definitely one of theno, I’d say the

  • coolest gadget that I own. For those who are curious, I use the Yuneec Q500. I'm going

  • to upgrade to the 4K camera.

  • Let's get some other footage. Let's get this shot with the shadow on the left side. I love

  • this shot here. This is a difficult shot to do without looking at the monitor. We got

  • a bunch of shots to play with which is always good. I'll get one more.

  • Perfect. We have our shots to work with. I want to show you how to trim clips. We'll

  • break these down to refine them. There's a few different ways to do this. I switch back

  • and forth depending on the kind of shot. First, look at the middle of my screen. There's an

  • arrow. That's what it is by default. You can trigger the arrow by tapping A. This is on

  • the cheat sheet I gave you. The other option is Blade. You are splicing the shot into two.

  • If I go through this shot and want it to end earlier, I can put the blade on this shot

  • and click. It will split this into two different clips. One example where that might be useful

  • is going to be covered later on. When you do a shot that you want to be fast and slow

  • it down, you take the original shot and splice it in two. Part becomes fast and the other

  • part is slow. Then, you don't have to do any transitions. It is just automatically going.

  • Let's undo that for now. The other way is to zoom in here to better see it. If you put

  • your cursor on the end of one clip, it will turn into that icon. What that means is if

  • I click there and drag to the left, it will bring that clip back, cutting into the final

  • frames of this video. See it is actually counting back the frames. If I move it to the right,

  • it shifts.

  • Now, I'm doing the same thing to the other clip on the other side. I'm cutting into it

  • so it starts later, like that. You can toggle between that by using the trim selector. I

  • don't find it necessary because your cursor is between two shots, so there is no need

  • to do it.

  • Zoom can be handy if you're on an iMac, using a traditional mouse. The reason I don't use

  • Zoom is because I have the track pad. I just pinch with my fingers to get into the shot.

  • For example, I can pull back all the waythat’s my whole project. I can pinch to zoom in,

  • you knowyou can see how now I can see a much more detailed version of that particular

  • shot.

  • The other way you can do this isif you look at the very bottom of my screensee,

  • we have a little magnifying glass. There's a minus and plus. You can manually do it that

  • way, too, and a little trick here is if you put the playheadif you click and put the

  • playhead, it’s going to know that you want to zoom in on that area. For fine tuning adjustments,

  • that is very handy.

  • There's another trick I like to do. I like to mark points. In my case, I do this with

  • audio. I'll bring in the audio file. I want to give you strong advice for those of you

  • creating content for YouTube or Facebook. I apologize if this sounds off topic. It is

  • important for you to know. If you don't know this and spend hours creating content, you

  • could be hit with an unfortunate reality. Let me explain how music works with YouTube

  • and Facebook. If you are putting background music on Facebookif you do not own the

  • rights to it, they will take it down. There's not much ability to challenge that decision.

  • You really are forced to take it down.

  • If you do a photomontage with music by your favorite musician, don't do it. You want copyright

  • free music. There's a great resource in that I’ve given to all of you in that little

  • cheat sheet. I do request, if you don’t mind using the link that I give you in that

  • cheat sheet, it is an affiliate link. We get a little credit. It doesn't cost you anything.

  • It helps us keep these classes free without charging you anything to take them. That service

  • is called Audio Jungle.

  • I'll give a quick shout out to my favorite composer. The guy is named Brian Crutchfield.

  • He's a graduate of Berkley School of Music. He's awesome. He did the song in the background,

  • which I own copyright access to. When you want to bring in music there's two ways to

  • do it. You can either drag it and drop it right into your project just as you saw I

  • just did, or, if you look here, on the right sidesee the little music note?

  • That, really more than anything, talks iTunes. It can talk to other folders, including Garage

  • Band. If you have it in iTunes you can bring it in through that method. I usually tend

  • to use copyright free music, so it’s usually in file form. I usually drag and drop it

  • In the case of YouTube, by the way, you can use copyrighted music. Points for me using

  • copyrighted and not copywritten. I always make that mistake. The big difference is that

  • you cannot make money from a video if you use a copyrighted song. Typically, I try to

  • use copyright free music. You are paying a licensing fee to use it, around $18. It depends

  • on the length of the track and popularity. It is a great resource to keep as a book mark.

  • For people who aren't tuning in live, we'll do a quick commercial break to keep these

  • classes free. Live listeners won't see an interruption. We'll continue on with a bunch

  • of other stuff. This is David A. Cox with TechTalk America. We're going over Final Cut

  • Pro today. We will be right back. We're back.

  • Before we went to the break, I mentioned a trick I use to create my projects. If you've

  • seen my drone videos, I edit to the beat of the music and the key moments in the music.

  • To do this I have to turn my audio on. I use a short cut that's on your cheat sheet. It's

  • for marking. You can do this for video or audio. I like to use it for audio for obvious

  • reasons. You want to make sure that the play head is where you want. Click on the audio

  • file right here. Hit play. Hit the M key on the keyboard. It will put a notation of that

  • moment.

  • I will typically do that first. I will align my shots to meet those moments. Those dramatic

  • moments cut into that perfect moment. Let's go through it to show you how it looks. I

  • forgot about the audio in that clip. Let me take that down and show you in a moment.

  • [19:17] [Audio plays]

  • Sorry. I clicked on the video clip when I should have done audio.

  • Let's do that from there.

  • I just went through the song while hitting the M key. Do you see these little blue dots?

  • They're a notation. It doesn't affect anything in the video. You can clear them out if you

  • don't want them. I will align these shots to meet this. Let's try moving some stuff

  • around here. See if I can try to extend it.

  • Another cool feature is that even though I told it to bring in this much of the shot,

  • it knows there's actually more there. If I suddenly need one second of footage here,

  • I can go here to drag it. It will pull it from the original file. I know it fits the

  • right timecode. The same goes with this shot. I need a little more. Notice that it's snapping

  • to the beat. If you want that feature to snap to different moments, it's this blue button

  • here. I believe by default, when you actually get Final Cut Pro, it does automatically come

  • set that way.

  • Next, what I want to do is I want to start to walk through a few other features here.

  • We'll go through this bar on the right side, towards the center. We'll jump around a little

  • bit. First one here we have is the effects browser. The effects browser comes with a

  • lot of different effects.

  • If you want to age your clip to make it look like 50s TV, watch this. Youll see in just

  • a moment. It will load the clip. You have to click on the clip and then click in here.

  • It should load it in a moment. We're live, so it might not do it right off the bat. It's

  • giving me a preview of what it will look like.

  • Another trick, by the way, if I hit the space bar right now, it will just play that clip

  • with that special effect. Notice there's no rendering. It is automatic. It might not be

  • as smooth as when it does render, but it looks pretty good. We can add noise if you want

  • that kind of film look, like aged paper. Some of these are more appealing than others. If

  • you want to get some really awesome extra effects, I'll direct your attention to the

  • link in the description of the video and the cheat sheet of the separate class we did.

  • This is for those who want to kick it up to the next level of editing. I did a video last

  • week called, "My Top 10 Final Cut Pro X Plug Ins." These are through a website that you

  • can download.

  • They're amazing effects. For those who use actors, there's a separate video for this

  • one. It's not in the document. If you have actors, it will do the same thing Photoshop

  • does to skin in a photo. It will track the person's face and smooth it in real time.

  • It's an amazing plug in. We have a whole video on that if that interests you. Check out the

  • links. Next, the photo icon connects to the photos

  • app or iPhoto. This is nice. A lot of you have questions about the Ken Burns effect.

  • That is the ability to zoom in or out of a photo. Can you do it in Final Cut Pro without

  • special plug ins? Yes. There is a plug in that makes it easier. That is included in

  • the Final Cut Pro Plug Ins video. If that interests you, I recommend you get it. It's

  • not expensive. If you bundle it with others, you can save money.

  • You take your photo, drag it and drop it into the time line. It's just like that. If you

  • bring in a photo with this black bar effect, I want to show you how to manage that. Look

  • up here at these black bars on the side. To the bottom left, we have this icon with the

  • arrow next to it. There's three forms of this. We have transform, crop and distort. I don't

  • know anyone who uses distort. I've never had a need for it. I use crop because you're telling

  • it what parts to trim. I'll tell it whatever I want to crop.

  • You'll notice it formatting the shape of this window. I can drag it down. Let's do it like

  • that. It fills the whole screen. There is the other method for Ken Burns. It is my own

  • personal opinion that the other method is a little better with a few more options. That

  • is the other way to do the Ken Burns effect. You can do the before and after like iMovie.

  • If you want to go on the cheap, that is the way to do it since it doesn't cost anything.

  • If you want additional features, the plug in is better.

  • If you hold the command key, you can bring in multiple photos at once. We already talked

  • about music. The next one I've never understood what it is supposed to look like. Maybe it's

  • an hour glass or a curtain. It's transitions. I like to caution people about using funky

  • transitions. Stay away from them. Cross dissolve and fade to black are your friends. The other

  • ones are too distracting. They get away from your subject.

  • I'm going to delete this shot. If you want to go from this shot to this shot, take it,

  • drag it and drop it between two shots. This is similar to how iMovie works. This grey

  • bar represents that. If you want to adjust the timing, zoom in and grab either corner

  • while dragging it in. It never lets me do it right while I'm live. That's how you do

  • it.

  • You can go into the precision editor. You double click to make it shorter or longer.

  • Let's do that. I wasn't planning on using the precision editor today. Next, is about

  • titles. Titles can be applied to footage or the background. It can be black, color or

  • animated background. If you want something more interesting than a black background,

  • there's another resource on that cheat sheet for Video Hive. One of the aspects of Video

  • Hive has 3D graphic features and stock footage you can buy. If you want ocean waves in the

  • background and don't have a shot, you can buy it for maybe five dollars. That footage

  • is inexpensive.

  • If you want to apply a title, let me show you how to do both methods here. Let's say

  • I want to apply it to my video here. You go through here to all the different options

  • here. These are the kinds of titles you can do. One of the features in the latest update

  • to Final Cut is the 3D ones. It can be repetitive if you use them too much. I'll use this blur

  • one here. It's subtle. If you roll your cursor over the preview, it will give you an idea

  • what it looks like. I'm going to drag and drop it above my shot. I'll give the viewer

  • a couple seconds of ordinary footage. The title will come in. Then, it will fade out.

  • If you want to adjust the length of this, put your cursor at the end or beginning and

  • drag it back. Right now it shows me that this title will be three and a quarter seconds

  • long. To edit the title, click on it first. Highlight it. Look at the right side of my

  • screen at these buttons. That is your inspector. This opens the window to see the title. You

  • choose the font and size. I'll put in the name. I'll call it "Droning Province Town

  • Presents..." You can change the font. Keep in mind that you have to highlight it like

  • a Word or Pages document.

  • If you don't see it on the screen, the play head needs to be where the text is showing

  • up. We'll have to change a few aspects here. Let's move it. You might want to re-position

  • it. For that you'll want to go here to the same button as before. This time we're not

  • doing crop, we're doing transform. When you're in transform mode, you can drag and drop it

  • wherever you want on the screen. That is something I wish you had in iMovie that you don't have.

  • Let's see how it looks. I'll make sure my speakers are muted.

  • Okay. It is a little studdered right there. The orange bar above it means it hasn't rendered

  • yet. The current version of Final Cut Pro starts automatically rendering any video when

  • it needs rendering, when you stop moving your cursor. Render means to process. This happens

  • a lot when dealing with graphics, transitions, special effects, fast motion and slow motion.

  • It tends to be pretty quick, especially when you have a better Maclike a Mac Pro or

  • an iMac, it’s going to do it significantly faster.

  • I do all of my editing. My computer is a 13 inch MacBook Air. I have the maximum specs

  • that I can get. If I had a better computer, that would be helpful for me. One day. One

  • day.

  • I want to point out the 3D text options here. If you click where it says "Normal", we have

  • 2D styles and 3D styles. They have different looks. You can change the colors. If you don't

  • like glossy green, you can make it blue, white or whatever you want.

  • We've gone over titles. If you want to do a title without video as a background, then

  • you will do the same thing. Instead of dragging it on top of a clip, drag it between two clips

  • or before a clip. In my case, I drop it right here to become its own bar. Right now it will

  • be over black. I'll add a different layer by dropping a video file beneath it.

  • Let's delete that. The next one we have is something I don't suspect you using. They

  • are generators. I never use them. You can use a countdown that would be helpful. Some

  • are weird blobs. I think these effects are obvious for anyone who does video editing

  • how you made your video. I try to stay away from it.

  • There's a curtain like the one in iMovie. This is trying to load in the background. If you need a simple background,

  • some of these are not animated. You can find them right there. The next one that I don't

  • use is themes. Themes are different effects that are meant to go together. For example,

  • when making the next Spider Man you might want to comic book theme. These are different

  • video transitions. The images of trees are place holders that you can replace with your

  • video.

  • This goes from one shot to another. I think this makes the video look amateurish. Sometimes

  • you want your video to have that cute effect. You can go through all of these here. Quite

  • a few come with Final Cut. Parents doing a sports video for their kids soccer practice

  • can do cute things. You can put the score at the top of the screen. It works like titles.

  • You can type it in and put in whatever text you want.

  • I want to jump around to show you some cool effects that you might want to be aware off.

  • I want to show you slow motion and fast motion. I'm sorry. Before I show you that I want to

  • show you one other thing: color correction. I want to show you this first. I'll use this

  • shot here. We start really close and back up to a full frame view of Province Town.

  • One of the cool effects to give it variety is to start slow and go fast. You can do the

  • opposite. You can start slow and go to normal speed. Mix it up how you want.

  • I'm showing you color correction first because you have to do it first. As soon as you split

  • the shot it's hard to provide color correction equally to both shots. It tends to look weird.

  • There's a few ways to color correct. Click on your shot to highlight it in yellow. Go

  • to the magic wand icon with the arrow next to it. We'll talk about these three here:

  • balance color, match color and show color board.

  • Balance color is like auto enhance in iMovie. You're telling the computer to do what it

  • thinks to make it look good. Admittedly, I do this when I do my videos to see what happens.

  • Usually when I shoot at sunset I don't need color correction. I don't know if it will

  • work that well for this one. In my case I think it made it look not as good. You can

  • keep that or use command Z to undo.

  • Option two is to match color. This is good when you do a two camera shoot, back and forth

  • between actors. You want the lighting to match. You go to match color. What you do is basically

  • click on the shot that you want to match again. Look at these two shots here. The color and

  • lighting is different. If I click on this shot here, it is attempting to make the color

  • match between the two shots. This isn't the greatest example because these are shot at

  • two different times. Take my word for it. If you have two actors in the same location

  • for two shots, you can click on the other shot and it will try to make the lighting

  • match both shots. I'll hit cancel for now.

  • The other option is to show the color board. This is where you get into nitty gritty. There

  • are three options: color, saturation and exposure. You can probably guess what they are. If your

  • greens are off, you can literally grab the greens to adjust them to where you want. This

  • is a way to add warmth to your shot. I'm giving more attention to the reds here. I'm letting

  • the other colors shine more. I'll undo that for now.

  • Let's go to saturation. We have your shadows, mid tones and highlights. You can grab each

  • dot and change them as necessary. I usually add just a hair to each. It tends to give

  • it that extra pop. I'll undo those three to get us back to our original.

  • This slide bar is the master. If you change it, it will change all of them. Be careful

  • about using too much. Subtle is better. If you desaturate it, you are left with a black

  • and white image. I'll keep it there for now. Exposure is the same exact deal. You can manipulate

  • individually or use your master controls.

  • Let's talk about that slow motion and fast motion thing. Let's say I want part to be

  • fast. Then, I want the user to take it in for a little. I'll keep it at normal speed

  • or slow it down. Here's how I like to do it. I'll pull out the blade tool with B on the

  • keyboard. I'll splice this shot into two separate shots. I'll manipulate this first shot here

  • to transition to the second shot. To manipulate speed, go up here to modify. Go to retime.

  • The options are slow or fast. I wouldn't get too caught up on percentages or how many times

  • faster. You can individually manipulate it afterwards. Watch what I do.

  • I'll say to make it fast. We'll make it two times faster. The shot will be automatically

  • sped up. The orange bar means it needs rendered. I can still play it. It won't play as smoothly.

  • When I stop moving my cursor it will render it. Right now, let me play for you what it

  • looks like. I thought that looked good, but I'll show you how to change it up.

  • Do you see this light blue bar by my shot? I can grab the side of it. If I want to make

  • it faster, I click and drag it in. It's not just 200 percent. I can make it exactly this

  • length. If you watch here, you'll see it match up to my key points. They match to the beat

  • of the music. Now, you can check out the look we got here. Give it two seconds to render

  • before we play. Kind of cool, right?

  • The same thing applies if you want to do it slower. If I want to slow down this shot,

  • I go to modify and retime. You can make it more or less by 50 percent until you get to

  • normal speed. It goes green when you hit 100 percent. This is 67 percent. Now, let's go

  • fast. Then, we'll go slow. It's a cool effect. If you're doing sports, that's a cool effect

  • to use by going fast and then really slow.

  • Freeze frame is the next thing I want to go over. Let's say I want to do that there. Click

  • on the shot and put your play head where you want the shot to be. Go back up here. I believe

  • it is under Edit. I am correct. If you like what I've done here where it's in the middle

  • of the shot, it will play the video, free frame it and pick up where it left off. It's

  • like a normal photo. If this is too long, you can taper it back. It's now only that

  • long.

  • My drone doesn't record audio, so we have to do something special. We'll talk about

  • the tricks we can do here. Let's zoom in to see it. You can see the actual sound waves

  • here. I want to show you how to change the levels. Right now they are in the green, even

  • though it's blue. If I raise this, you'll see the yellow and red in there. It might

  • be tough to see there. Do you see the yellow? You want to stay away from that because it

  • will get blown out. It will get distorted.

  • If you need to tweak the overall levels for a shot, there's this very hard to see, thin,

  • black bar that goes through the shot. If you put your cursor on it, it goes to that icon.

  • You have the arrow pointed up and down. It shows you how many decibels when you click

  • it that you're lowering it by. The other thing you may or may not see if you're live is the

  • little dot at the beginning of the shot.

  • That is your fade ability. When I put my cursor over it the arrows go left to right. If I

  • want to fade in the audio, I can drag that dot. It's causing a curve. It's showing exactly

  • how long it will take to go from no volume to full volume. It's a very quick thing. You

  • can do that at the end of the shot as well.

  • Sometimes you may want to detach the audio to extract it from the clip. If you have multiple

  • tracks going on, you might need to extract the audio to make it its own file. The easiest

  • way to do this is secondary click on the clip. You see we have the option to detach the audio.

  • I want to show you another trick. There's a shortcut key to disable.

  • Let me give an example. When I play with music I might have a few different songs. I'm trying

  • to figure out what song sounds best with this. If you play this now, it would sound awful.

  • We have one track after the other. Sorry about that. I keep my cursor a little larger than

  • normal to make it easier for the folks who are hereoops, that’s—let’s go to

  • I'm going to play this. We have multiple audio files on top of each other. It will sound

  • horrible, right? If you need to do this test, hit the V key. That disables it. It's going

  • to play this song without that song. Hit V again to re-enable.

  • The next trick I want to show is what to do when you're done with your video. There are

  • a few tricks to export. You can use the share button at the right side of the screen. You

  • can also go to File and to Share. I recommend that you do a master file export. I would

  • save this to an external drive or something like Dropbox. Go under Settings. There's things

  • like Video Codec Format. I like to do at least one as the source. Notice the file size went

  • from 169 MB to about 10 times that in source resolution. It's 1.2 GB. This depends on how

  • much space you have.

  • Keep in mind that it's good to have the highest resolution copy of your video. Five years

  • ago 1080p was hard to find. Now, 4K is the thing. They're coming out with higher resolutions

  • than 4K. Make sure you have the absolute maximum resolution that you can get somewhere. Include

  • chapter markers if you use them. Personally, I don't.

  • It will ask you where you want to save this on the next screen. The default file format

  • is an MP4 format. That's a versatile format. That about does it for our Final Cut Pro class

  • today.

  • I'm going to go to the live audience and take their questions. For those watching on our

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  • This is David A. Cox with TechTalk America. This is our class about Final Cut Pro. Class

  • dismissed.

Hello, everyone, and welcome to the class. This is David A. Cox with techtalkamerica.com,

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