System information

a. Solo the video track.
b. Position the cursor at the synchronization point and drag the event's snap offset so it
snaps to the cursor.
c. Repeat steps a and b for each clip.
d. Drag the cursor to a snap point, and then snap the other clips to the cursor.
If the cameras were not genlocked together (shooting at the same cadence) you may
find one to be up to half a frame ahead of the other. Unless your scene has lots of
fast motion, this is acceptable; just be sure to get them as close as possible on the
timeline.
3. Verify alignment:
a. Drag the Level slider on the top track to set its opacity to 50%.
b. Find a portion of the video with good movement and verify the motion is the same in both
clips and that one clip does not lead the other.
If the cameras were not genlocked together (shooting at the same cadence), you may find
that one clip is up to half a frame ahead of the other. Unless your scene has fast motion,
this is acceptable.
4. Select both video events, right-click one of the events, and choose Pair as Stereoscopic 3D Subclip.
One video event is deleted from the timeline, the active take for the event is set to the new
multistream subclip, and a new multistream clip is added to the Project Media window. If you view
the clip properties for the new subclip, you'll see that the Stereoscopic 3D Mode is set to Pair with
next stream.
5. Delete the audio and video tracks you created in step 1.
After synchronizing the events, you will have a paired stereoscopic subclip in the Project Media
window. You can drag these clips to the timeline as stereoscopic 3D media.
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