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May, 2002
Final
Cut Pro 3 for Macintosh: Visual QuickPro Guide
Published by Peachpit Press
By Lisa Brenneis
ISBN 0-321-11583-X
List price: $29.99 U.S.
CD- DVCreators.net FCP PowerStart 2/3 Demo
704 pages
purchase from the lafcpug
store.
Review By Ken
Stone
Book excerpt follows review.
I remember when I first got Final Cut Pro 1 several years ago.
I was new to NLE, in fact, I did not even know what the letters
'NLE' stood for (Non Linear Editing). As a still photographer
and graphic artist I wanted to make movies of my work so I bought
FCP. For those of you who remember FCP 1 you will also remember
the manual that came with it. "What manual?" I hear
you ask. To be sure the manual was lacking in every regard. What
made matters worse, for a complete newbie like myself, was the
fact that there was not a single FCP book on the market. I spent
much of my time at the FCP Discussions Boards reading everything
I could. Then, after about a month, the first FCP book came out.
The book, 'Final Cut Pro for Macintosh'
- Visual Quickpro Guide, published by Peachpit Press and written
by Lisa Brenneis. I ran out and bought the book. Flipping through
the book I was at first disappointed. This was not a book for
beginners. In fact, it says that it is only for 'intermediate
and advanced' on the back cover.
If you are new to NLE and FCP there
are a number of excellent 'beginner' books for you. The manual
that now ships with FCP is quite good and contains a tutorial
CD with exercises to teach the basic fundamentals of editing
and FCP.
For everyone else Final Cut Pro
3 for Macintosh is a must have.
For those of you not familiar with
the Peachpit Visual Quickpro Guide books, these books are not
formatted like other books out there. No two page long paragraphs.
Final Cut Pro 3 for Macintosh is a reference book pure and simple.
And a complete FCP reference book it is. Starting with hardware,
installation and set up, a complete tour of the interface, through
all aspects of the FCP 3, tools and techniques, output and even
a final section that briefly covers the changes we face when
running FCP 3 in OS X.
What makes this book so powerful
is it's simple and consistent approach to conveying information.
Each topic title is followed by a brief explanation, then a 'how
to' by the numbers; one, two, three. Each step is accompanied
by screen shots, and there are many, that illustrate the steps
to be taken to acomplish a task. Each illustration is fully captioned
making clear the instructions that are being presented. Important
and helpful tips are offered and there are 'Final Cut Pro Protocol'
sidebar sections that explain the rules and logic behind the
way FCP works and why we need to do things in a certain way when
working in FCP.
Final Cut Pro 3 for Macintosh is
a task oriented book, clearly written. While you will probably
read the book, or large sections of the book, I have found that
when I am working in FCP 3 and need to do a task, I can look
up the item in the Index at the back of the book which directs
me to the instructions, the steps to be performed to accomplish
that task. Often, looking at the screen shots, picture walkthroughs,
that accompany the instructions is enough to get me going. I
have included an excerpt from the book: "Working with Keyframes
in the Timeline", (below). I have attempted to match the
layout used in the book, but I can only come close using web
formatting.
Final Cut Pro 3 for Macintosh has
been completely updated for FCP 3 and includes a FCP PowerStart
2/3 Demo CD by DVCreators.net.
I have 12 different FCP books sitting
on a bookshelf, I have only one FCP book sitting next to my Mac,
it's "Final Cut Pro 3 for Macintosh" by Lisa Brenneis.
Enjoy,
--ken
Book Excerpt from Final Cut Pro 3 for Macintosh: Visual QuickPro
Guide.
By Lisa Brenneis
HTML re-creation
Working with
Keyframes in the Timeline
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Figure 7.110 Keyframe overlays allow you
to sculpt audio levels right in the Timeline.
Figure 7.111 Keyframes appear on the Filter and Motion
bars in the Timeline,but it 's easier to adjust these keyframes
on the Viewer 's Effects tab or in the Canvas.
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Keyframes indicate that effects
parameters are changing over time. You can think of a keyframe
as a kind of edit point: You stamp a keyframe at the point where
you want to change the value of an effect's parameter. This section
covers Timeline functions relating to keyframes.
Final Cut Pro has two types of
keyframes that can be displayed in the Timeline:
- Keyframe overlays indicate clip opacity for video clips
and volume level for audio clips. Keyframe overlays are displayed
as line graphs right on top of the track display in the Timeline
(Figure 7.110).
- Keyframes appear in the Filter and Motion bars beneath
sequence clips that have filter and motion effects applied to
them (Figure 7.111). Keyframes indicate where parameters
change for filter and motion effects. You can select the parameter
keyframes you want to display in a particular Filter or Motion
bar.
The Timeline's Filter and Motion
bars are good places to get a big-picture idea of the relationship
between keyframes on different tracks, but the Timeline view
is not ideal for adjusting keyframes on a detailed level.
For more precise control of keyframes,
double-click the clip in the Timeline to open it in the Viewer;
then select the Filter or Motion tab. Working with keyframes
to create effects using the Filter and Motion tabs is covered
in Chapter 13, "Compositing and Special Effects."
Tip
- The Pen tool selects
only keyframes, so it's the best tool to use if you need to adjust
a keyframe overlay near an edit point-for example, when you're
fine-tuning a fade.
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Figure 7.112 Click the Clip Keyframes control
in the Timeline window to toggle the display of filter and motion
keyframes.
Figure 7.113 Control-click a clip 's Filter or Motion
bar to access and choose from a list of parameters to display.
Figure 7.114 Use the Selection tool to click and drag
the bar and slide the whole set of keyframes.
Figure 7.115 Click the Clip Overlays control in the Timeline
window to toggle the display of keyframe overlays.
Figure 7.116 Click and drag a keyframe in the Filter and
Motion bars to adjust its location.
Figure 7.117 Use the Pen tool to add a keyframe to clip
's keyframe overlay graph.
Figure 7.118 A ToolTip displaying the current audio level
updates as you adjust the keyframe.
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To display keyframes
for
individual effects parameters:
- In the Timeline, click
the Clip Keyframes button (located in the lower-left corner)
to display the Filter and Motion bars. Keyframes are displayed
in a clip's Filter and Motion bars (Figure 7.112).
To select the effects
keyframes displayed in the Timeline:
1.In
the Timeline, Control-click the Filter or Motion bar to access
its shortcut menu (Figure 7.113).
2.From
the list of all of the parameters for each filter currently applied
to the clip:
- Select the name of
a parameter to display its keyframes in the Timeline.
- Select the filter
name to display all the parameters for that filter.
Tips
- After you've selected
a filter in the Filter and Motion bars, double-click the bar
to open that filter on the Viewer's Effects tab.
- You can slide a
whole set of keyframes in a clip's Filter and Motion bars. Use
the Selection tool to click and drag on the bar, and the keyframes
will slide to the left or right (Figure 7.114).
- Any time you're
working with the Selection tool, the fastest way to a Pen tool
is to press the Option key. The Selection tool switches to Pen
tool mode as long as you're holding down the Option key.
To display keyframe overlays
in the Timeline:
- In the Timeline, click
the Clip Overlays but-ton in the lower-left corner (Figure
7.115).
To move keyframes in the Timeline:
To add an overlay keyframe to
a track:
1.
From the Tool palette, select the Pen tool.
2. On the selected clip's overlay keyframe graph, click
where you want to place the keyframe (Figure 7.117).
A new keyframe will be added to the overlay.
To adjust the values of individual
overlay keyframes:
Do one of the following:
- Click and drag overlay
keyframes vertically to adjust their values. As you drag, a ToolTip
appears, displaying the parame-ter's value (Figure 7.118).
Shift-drag the graph line between
two overlay keyframes to adjust its position.
To delete overlay keyframes:
- Drag keyframes off
the track completely to delete them.
The keyframes (except for the last
one) are removed, and the keyframe path is adjusted to reflect
the change.
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Final Cut Pro 3 for Macintosh: Visual QuickPro Guide, (pages
325-327) copyright © 2002, 2000 by Lisa Brenneis, published
by Peachpit Press. Reproduced by permission of Pearson Education,
Inc. and Peachpit Press.
You can purchase 'Final Cut Pro
3 for Macintosh: Visual QuickPro Guide' from the lafcpug
store.
For a list of bookstores who carry
Peachpit Press books call (800) 283-9444 or visit http://www.peachpit.com/special/bookstores.html
top
Review copyright ©
www.kenstone.net 2002
This article first appeared on www.kenstone.net and is reprinted here
with permission.
All screen captures and
textual references are the property and trademark of their creators/owners/publishers.
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