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Table Of Contents
- Contents
- Chapter 1: What’s new in Final Cut Pro?
- Chapter 2: Final Cut Pro basics
- Chapter 3: Import media
- Chapter 4: Analyze media
- Chapter 5: Organize your media
- Chapter 6: Play back and skim media
- Chapter 7: Create and manage projects
- Chapter 8: Edit your project
- Editing overview
- Select clips and ranges
- Add and remove clips
- Adding clips overview
- Drag clips to the Timeline
- Append clips to your project
- Insert clips in your project
- Connect clips to add cutaway shots, titles, and synchronized sound effects
- Overwrite parts of your project
- Replace a clip in your project with another clip
- Add and edit still images
- Add clips using video-only or audio-only mode
- Remove clips from your project
- Solo, disable, and enable clips
- Find a Timeline clip’s source clip
- Arrange clips in the Timeline
- Cut and trim clips
- View and navigate
- Add and remove markers
- Correct excessive shake and rolling shutter issues
- Chapter 9: Add and adjust audio
- Chapter 10: Add transitions, titles, effects, and generators
- Transitions, titles, effects, and generators overview
- Add and adjust transitions
- Transitions overview
- How transitions are created
- Set the default duration for transitions
- Add transitions to your project
- Delete transitions from your project
- Adjust transitions in the Timeline
- Adjust transitions in the Transition inspector and Viewer
- Adjust transitions with multiple images
- Create specialized versions of transitions in Motion
- Add and adjust titles
- Adjust built-in effects
- Add and adjust clip effects
- Add generators
- Use onscreen controls
- Use the Video Animation Editor
- Chapter 11: Advanced editing
- Group clips with compound clips
- Add storylines
- Fine-tune edits with the Precision Editor
- Create split edits
- Make three-point edits
- Try out clips using auditions
- Retime clips to create speed effects
- Edit with mixed-format media
- Use roles to manage clips
- Use XML to transfer projects and Events
- Edit with multicam clips
- Multicam editing overview
- Multicam editing workflow
- Import media for a multicam edit
- Assign camera names and multicam angles
- Create multicam clips in the Event Browser
- Cut and switch angles in the Angle Viewer
- Sync and adjust angles and clips in the Angle Editor
- Edit multicam clips in the Timeline and the Inspector
- Multicam editing tips and tricks
- Chapter 12: Keying and compositing
- Chapter 13: Color correction
- Chapter 14: Share your project
- Chapter 15: Manage media files
- Chapter 16: Preferences and metadata
- Chapter 17: Keyboard shortcuts and gestures
- Chapter 18: Glossary
17 0 Chapter 8 Edityourproject
Jump between markers
You can move quickly from marker to marker in the Timeline or the Event Browser.
Move between markers
Do either of the following:
m To go to the next marker: Choose Mark > Next > Marker, or press Control-Apostrophe (’).
m To go to the previous marker: Choose Mark > Previous > Marker, or press Control-
Semicolon (;).
Correctexcessiveshakeandrollingshutterissues
You can smooth a clip’s shaky footage by correcting the stabilization, rolling shutter,
or both.
The stabilization feature in Final Cut Pro reduces the camera motion in your video so
that shaky parts can be played back more smoothly. And, at any time, you can turn o
stabilization for any clip so that it plays as originally recorded.
Many camcorders and still cameras include CMOS image sensors that expose the
picture they’re recording progressively, instead of all at once. As a result, if the
camera moves a lot during recording, or if the camera is recording fast motion, image
distortion can occur. This causes the picture to appear wobbly or skewed. Final Cut Pro
has a rolling shutter feature that can reduce this motion distortion.
Fix a clip with excessive shake or rolling shutter distortion
1 If the clip is not already in your project, add it to the Timeline and select it.
Note: These operations act on whole clip selections, not on range selections. To get
the highest-quality and fastest results, isolate the problem section by cutting the clip
with the Blade tool in the Timeline. Then apply the correction to just the video footage
that needs correcting.
2 To open the Video inspector, click the Inspector button in the toolbar (shown below),
and click the Video button at the top of the pane that appears.










