Editing and Effects WindowsThe following brief descriptions of the features and functions of each of the four main windows are simplified summaries of the full list of features. Final Cut Express's designers went all out to support a wide variety of editing styles, and they have produced a very flexible editing system. The BrowserThe Browser (Figure 1.6 ) is the window where you organize and access all the media elements used as source material for your projects. It also contains your projects' sequences: the data files that contain edited playlists. Figure 1.6. Use the Browser window to organize the media elements in your projects.
The Browser's Effects tab is your source for effects, filters, and generators, including the text generator (Figure 1.7 ). Figure 1.7. The Browser's Effects tab displays Final Cut Express's effects, filters, and generators, as well as your own customized effects.
The Browser is not like a folder on your computer's Desktopit's not a collection of actual files. Instead, a Browser item is a pointer to a file on your hard disk. It's important to keep in mind that file storage is independent of Browser organization. That means you can place the same clip in multiple Browser projects, and each instance of the clip will refer to the same media file on your hard drive. For detailed information about the Browser, see Chapter 7, "Organizing Clips in the Browser." The ViewerThe Viewer is bursting with functions. When you're editing, the Viewer acts as your source monitor; you can review individual video and audio clips and mark edit points. You can also load clips from the current sequence into the Viewer to refine your edits, apply effects, create titlesand, as they say, much, much more. The FCE interface offers a stack of tabs in the Viewer that organize and display audio and video plus provide controls for any effects you want to apply to a clip. Here are quick summaries of the functions available on each tab. The Viewer's Video tab
The Viewer's Audio tab
The Viewer's Effects tabs
For more information on the Viewer, see Chapter 8, "Working with Clips in the Viewer." To learn about creating effects, see Chapter 14, "Compositing and Effects Overview." The CanvasThe Canvas is a monitor where you view playback of your edited sequence. The Canvas and the Timeline work together; the Canvas always displays the frame at the current position of the Timeline's playhead. The Canvas (Figure 1.11 ) looks similar to the Viewer and has many of the same controls. You can use the controls in the Canvas to play sequences, mark sequence In and Out points, add sequence markers, and set keyframes. Figure 1.11. The Canvas window.
In addition to using the Viewer-like marking controls, you can perform various types of drag-and-drop edits in the Canvas edit overlay (Figure 1.12 ), which appears automatically when you drag a clip into the Canvas. You can also use the Canvas's Image+Wireframe mode to plot motion effects. Figure 1.12. The Canvas window, with the Canvas edit overlay displayed. Drag a clip from the Viewer or Browser and drop it on the type of edit you want to perform.
For more information on the Canvas, see Chapter 10, "Editing in the Timeline and the Canvas." Learn about applying motion effects in Chapter 15, "Motion." The TimelineChapter 10, "Editing in the Timeline and the Canvas." Figure 1.13. The Timeline displays a chronological view of your edited sequence.
The Tool paletteChapter 9, "Basic Editing." Figure 1.14. The Tool palette's pop-up selectors pack 24 tools into this tiny floating toolbar.
The Voice Over toolUse the Voice Over tool (Recording Audio with the Voice Over Tool" in Chapter 12. Figure 1.15. The Voice Over tool records synchronous audio directly into FCE.
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