Penn State University - School of Visual Arts
Fall 2014
ART 316 Video Art
Professor: Eduardo Navas (ean13@psu.edu)
Office Hours: Mondays and Wednesdays 10 AM - 11 AM
209 Arts Cottage
Please contact at: ean13@psu.edu
Final Cut Lecture #1 Introduction |
Open Final Cut. SET UP SCRATCH DISK: OPEN A NEW PROJECT: No matter what, you will always need a sequence in order to edit. Once you begin using Final Cut, the application will usually remember the lat project you worked on. If not it should ask you to begin a new project. Do so and then define your sequence. LAUNCH A SEQUENCE: You should name your sequence. This will help you keep track of different parts of your project if you end up with more than one sequence. Your sequence is the file in which you edit your footage. Now you need to bring in your footage. IMPORT FOOTAGE: All your actual footage should be on your external hard drive. If you decide to place your footage on the computer's desktop which you use to edit, it is very likely that you computer will crash and you will lose your project. IMPORT FILES TO PROJECT FILE: Before you import files into Final Cut, make sure to name them properly. Once you name them and link them, you will have to be careful not to change their names. Otherwise, you will have to rename them in either or both Final Cut's Project Bin as well as the external hard drive. The names must always match. Otherwise, you will have offline files appear on the project bin, and you will have to relink them. EDIT ON THE TIMELINE: |