Final Cut Pro 5 - changing speed without ripple
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Final Cut Pro 5 - changing speed without ripple
I've been making AMVs in Adobe Premiere 6.5 for the Mac for the past few years, and decided it's time to upgrade. As I started I went through many tutorials and have successfully converted my dvd footage into an appropriate codec, imported it properly into FCP, etc., etc. But now I'm stuck on one dumb little thing that I can't seem to find the answer to in the stack of manuals that came with FCP 5.
Usually when I'm working on an AMV, I work out of order. I'll drop in clips, then polish as I feel the need. It's never been a problem working in Premiere, but when I change the speed of a clip in the timeline in FCP, it ripples the rest of the timeline forward or backward to match the time difference created by the speed change. So for example if I slow down the clip so that it's one second longer, everything after it in the timeline ripples one second forward. As I usually have some editing past that point already done, it knocks it out of sync and I have to go back and re-set all of my editing.
So my question: is there a way to prevent speed changes to a clip from making the remaining timeline footage ripple forward or backward in the timeline? I'm guessing I want some sort of overwrite functionality enabled, but short of doing every edit as a three point edit, I can't figure out how to prevent it. (I don't use three point editing because I'm usually messing around with the speed to see what looks and flows properly, and I tend to make many minute edits in the process.) At worst I can lock the video tracks I'm satisfied with and work in an empty video track, but that's an inconvenient hack.
If anyone can help me out I'd appreciate it. I'm going to pour over the manuals again to see if I can find the missing piece.
Kasra
Usually when I'm working on an AMV, I work out of order. I'll drop in clips, then polish as I feel the need. It's never been a problem working in Premiere, but when I change the speed of a clip in the timeline in FCP, it ripples the rest of the timeline forward or backward to match the time difference created by the speed change. So for example if I slow down the clip so that it's one second longer, everything after it in the timeline ripples one second forward. As I usually have some editing past that point already done, it knocks it out of sync and I have to go back and re-set all of my editing.
So my question: is there a way to prevent speed changes to a clip from making the remaining timeline footage ripple forward or backward in the timeline? I'm guessing I want some sort of overwrite functionality enabled, but short of doing every edit as a three point edit, I can't figure out how to prevent it. (I don't use three point editing because I'm usually messing around with the speed to see what looks and flows properly, and I tend to make many minute edits in the process.) At worst I can lock the video tracks I'm satisfied with and work in an empty video track, but that's an inconvenient hack.
If anyone can help me out I'd appreciate it. I'm going to pour over the manuals again to see if I can find the missing piece.
Kasra
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i'm not sure i understand the question.
are you asking howto change the speed on just one clip? control click on it, and theres an option for clip speed. to speed up, make it above 100. to slow it down, set it below 100.
you can also reverse footage this way, by setting negative values. like -100 would be normal speed in reverse.
are you asking howto change the speed on just one clip? control click on it, and theres an option for clip speed. to speed up, make it above 100. to slow it down, set it below 100.
you can also reverse footage this way, by setting negative values. like -100 would be normal speed in reverse.
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Sorry. I got a little long-winded there.
No, I know how to change the speed. The problem is that when I change the speed, it ripples everything in the timeline as well. So if I change the speed of a clip so that it's two seconds, everything after it on the timeline is two seconds later. I don't want it to do that. Is there a way to prevent it?
Kasra
No, I know how to change the speed. The problem is that when I change the speed, it ripples everything in the timeline as well. So if I change the speed of a clip so that it's two seconds, everything after it on the timeline is two seconds later. I don't want it to do that. Is there a way to prevent it?
Kasra
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Okay, I've done a bit of poking around online, and I've discovered my gripe is an inherent problem in Final Cut Pro. There is a work-around for it that I've tested and have verified its workabilty. An explanation can be found here:
http://www.kenstone.net/fcp_homepage/ma ... balis.html
Take a look at "Using Match Frame to do Slow or Fast Motion Without Rippling the Timeline". Once you've finished step 4, you can drag your clip from the Viewer back down into the timeline where you want it. (Make certain you're dragging it into the lower two-thirds of the video track, so that it overwrites rather than ripples.) For good housekeeping, follow step 8 and restore the original clip to 100% speed so that it's normal speed in case you want to use it later for footage.
Kasra
http://www.kenstone.net/fcp_homepage/ma ... balis.html
Take a look at "Using Match Frame to do Slow or Fast Motion Without Rippling the Timeline". Once you've finished step 4, you can drag your clip from the Viewer back down into the timeline where you want it. (Make certain you're dragging it into the lower two-thirds of the video track, so that it overwrites rather than ripples.) For good housekeeping, follow step 8 and restore the original clip to 100% speed so that it's normal speed in case you want to use it later for footage.
Kasra
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I just open up an empty sequence, drag the clip in, change speed, and drag back.
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This explains why a Final Cut Pro user I watched editing video did this. I thought it seemed inefficient to have to change the speed of a clip in another sequence and drag it over to the main one. She must have been used to doing this because she did it pretty fast (and had to do this multiple times, too).Shazzy wrote:I just open up an empty sequence, drag the clip in, change speed, and drag back.
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I was looking at this thread in a daze .... people have problems with speed changes? Then I realized that I do my speed changes completely different. I set in and out points in the timeline and then use "Fill to Fit". That gives me an overall speed adjustment (faster or slower), without moving things in my timeline. The I go in (If I need to, i.e. to ramp footage) and adjust the key frames with the timing tool, thus avoiding all these headaches. Plus, I have found that this allows for finer control .....