User Manual

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Moving (Sliding) and Overwriting Clips
Formerly called slipping in previous versions of Fairlight, sliding refers to moving a clip to the
left or right in the Timeline, changing the timing of that clip’s position in the edit.
To move or slide clips in the Timeline, do one of the following:
To move one or more selected clips in the Timeline: Drag any clip in the Timeline to
any other position. If you’re in Edit Selection mode, you must drag using the bottom
half of the selection. If you drag a clip to overlap another clip, the clip you’re dragging
overwrites the clip you’re moving it over.
To nudge one or more selected clips in the Timeline using the keyboard: Make a
selection, then press the Comma key (nudge 1 frame left) or Period key (nudge 1 frame
right) to roll the selected edit to the left or right. Shift-Comma and Shift-Period nudges
by 5 frames.
To move one or more selected clips up or down to other tracks at the same time:
Make a selection, then hold the Shift key down while dragging one of the selected clips
up or down in the Timeline to lock their position in time while moving them to other
tracks. Or, you can hold the Option key down and press Up or Down Arrow.
Sync Oset Indicator
Audio clips in the Fairlight page display an “out-of-sync” or sync offset indicators when theyre
moved out of sync with the video items theyre linked to.
Slipping
Formerly called resyncing, slipping an audio clip keeps that clip in the same place in the
Timeline while changing the range of media that appears in that spot. Slip edits do not change
the duration of the overall Timeline, and they don’t move the clip’s position relative to the other
clips in the Timeline. Slipping simply changes the range of media that clip represents.
NOTE: While available in previous versions of Fairlight, slipping is not available at the
time of this writing.
Duplicating Clips
The Duplicate Selection command duplicates one or more selected clips, placing the duplicates
immediately after the Out point of the selection. If you’re duplicating a region of a clip with tails,
or a clip that’s in between other clips, the duplicated selection will overwrite whatever is to the
right of the current selection, for the duration of the duplicate.
Chapter – 154 Editing Basics in the Fairlight Page 3218