Transcripts
1. Why You Need This Masterclass!: Final Cut Pro is
hands down one of the most powerful video
editors you can get on Mac. And once you know
your way around it, it's also one of
the fastest and the easiest to create
great looking videos. The problem is most people
waste hours and hours or even days trying to figure
it all out for themselves. So in this training, I'm
going to take you through the most efficient way to
edit in Final Cut Pro, all the key tools
that you need to know to actually get great
looking videos really fast. We'll go through everything from getting your project set up, importing your
footage correctly. The key editing tools
that you'll actually use dialing in
your audio levels, adding your titles and effects right through to exporting
a finished video. So all the key stuff that's
going to get your results fast without wasted
time and rework. I'm also going to
show you some of the latest AI features
built right into Final Cut Pro that will
allow you to create amazing looking videos and effects again in a
fraction of the time. Now, if we haven't met before, my name is Justin Brown, and together with
my brother Mike, we've grown our primal
video YouTube channel to over 1.8 million subscribers. And after years in professional
video production, too, and even training our
own editing team we've distilled all the
important stuff that you need to know to be
editing your videos, fast and easy in Final Cut
Pro into this training. So if you're ready to level
up your video editing, I'll see you in the
next video. Cheers.
2. Kicking Off: Massive welcome to this
Final Cut Pro training. This is one of my favorite
video editing tools. I think it's really powerful. I think it's really fast,
and I actually find it one of the most
fun tools to edit in. And I think that's
a key part of this, because if you're enjoying the tools, enjoying the process, and it's not overwhelming
and daunting, then you'll do more of it, which means your message
gets out there more. So I'm going to take
you through everything from setting up your projects, importing your
footage, through to the most efficient method for
editing your videos down. Too many people get caught
up and they jump straight into all the effects and the color grades and
all of that stuff, and all it does is
slow down the rest of the process because all of that stuff needs to be processed every time you want
to do anything. So I'm going to take
you through each step in the process in
the correct order, and I'm even going to dive into some of the AI features in here, which will speed up
your editing workflows and allow you to be
more creative, too. Now, I do want to stress here that I'm not covering off on every single little feature
and everything in here. There's so much in here. This is the key stuff that you need to know to get
up to speed fast, to be able to go and create your videos as fast as possible. Now, we have made the
video files that I'm using available for you to download and use as well to
follow along with, but what I would
recommend even better. Is to use your own video files. So by the time we reach
the end of this training, you don't just
have a video made. You have one of your videos
made and ready to release. Now, I guess, the only other thing I
want to mention here is that there are currently
two versions of Final Cut. There is the version
that you pay outright, and there is the
subscription version in the creator studio. At the time of filming this,
all the core functionality in Final Cut is exactly
the same in both of them. If you're on the subscription, you'll have extra
downloadable assets and title packs and those
kinds of things as well. But really, you can get great
results with either one. So with that stuff out of
the way, let's jump into.
3. Creating Your Library & Importing: A So this is what you see when you
first open up a final cut. This is a brand new install. No projects, libraries
or anything created yet. If you have jumped in to
have a play, don't worry. You can still follow
along with this. But the first step that
we need to do is to create our project library,
our video library. So we can see here it's
already calling our attention to this with it being
like a blue purply color. We want to click
anywhere on this to create or to
open up a library. Now, we do get to
choose where we're going to save this library. This is really the container
for our video project. I'm just going to leave
this here under movies, and I'm going to call
it Justin Editing. I'm going to hit Save. And you can see now the next
step then is prompting us to start to import our
media, our video assets. So we can click on this now, and then this is the
window where we can navigate through our files and folders and things to find the things that we
want to import. But something really important that I want to call out here upfront is that that library container that we've
just created that now we're going to import video
files in to use with it, we actually have a very
important question here, a decision point
we need to make. Do we want to leave the files in their current place
on your computer, or do we want to copy everything into that library package file? And for me personally,
I prefer to just keep the files wherever
I have them already on the computer so that I'm not doubling on extra files and
having them in one location, but also having them in
this editing project, too, and obviously taking up twice the amount of space
and all of that stuff. But I'm calling this
out for two reasons. The first one is that if you leave this on copy to library, you could end up with
some massive files and duplicates and
all of that stuff, and this library file
getting pretty big. But also because in some cases, this might actually be
the best option for you. So if you want to have one
file that has everything related to the
videos that you're making there related to that, then this would be a
great way to do that, making the backup
process and everything easy or transferring
from one MAC to another. You could then just
grab that library file and move that where
you need it to go. So I just wanted to
explain that one up front. Again, for me personally, I
leave the files in place, and this just accesses
them or links to them. Now, the other thing I
want to call out here on this import footage window is
that we do have the ability now to have some things run or processed on our videos at
the time of importing them. You can see the default
setting here is that it's enabling them
for visual search. This is one of the newer
AI features in Final Cut, where it's analyzing your clips with AI to know
what's happening, what's in each of the clips. So when you're
searching for things, it can actually look
inside the video files and help you find clips fast. So I'd recommend you
leave this one on, and I'd actually recommend you leave the rest of
the settings as but knowing what you've
got access to in here to customize this
experience up for you, you also have the ability to do things like
balance your color. So some AI color grading. You can have it auto
detect and find people, you can name the people
in your clips as well. If you're running an older Mac, you have the ability here to create optimized media files. So if your computer
is struggling to edit the files directly off your
camera or off your phone, this will create
a temporary file. Is optimized to work on your system, giving you
better performance. And likewise, you got some audio adjustments and things
down the bottom here. Now, again, while I
suggest leaving this here as stock and
why I leave this here as stock or default and not applying these things
is that I can easily apply them in the
process if I need them and not just have them
applied to all of my clips. And that would be what I
would recommend for you. So the file that we're going
to import here, first off, though, is our primary
camera footage. If it's a video like
a talking head video like this where I'm
presenting to camera, that would be the main
file that I'm bringing in. So I've got this clip
here, camera recording. I'm going to select that and
I'm going to choose Import. We could definitely bring in multiple files at this point, but the beauty of this
is we can come back at any time and bring
in extra files. You might find you're
making something, maybe using an AI
video generator, bringing that in or
other titles and things. But the most important clip
that you bring in first is that primary camera
because that's going to help us set up the
rest of our project.
4. Project Setup: You see how it's prompting
us down the bottom here to create our project. So we have our library
inside of a library. We can have multiple files. We can have multiple projects. So if you're going to create different versions of a video or videos that are going to be
sharing the same footage, then it makes sense
to have them all in one combined library. If you're going to be creating
totally separate videos on totally different topics that aren't going to be sharing
a lot of video files, that don't make sense to make a new library for
each one of them. But a project is really
an individual video inside of that library that
we're making a timeline. That's our next step here is to create this project,
they call it. So we can click down here,
and this is where we can give our project or
our timeline a name. Let's call it an edit. And then we can jump
into our settings here if there's something
specific that we need. So by clicking this
use custom settings, we can choose our
video resolution, whether it's four K or ten ADP. We can also specify if
our video is going to be a vertical or
portrait video as well. We can also lock
down things like the video frame rate in here
and our audio settings. So if you do have specific
settings that you need to use for a specific platform or
something like that, then you can manually set
these here. This is where you. But what I would recommend
for most people, and in most cases, is go back to using
automatic settings. And it says here
that these settings are going to be set based on the first video clips properties that you're
bringing in here. And so that's exactly
why we bought in our primary camera
footage first so that when we go through this
process and bring that in, it's going to set everything
out perfectly for us, matching the frame
rate, the resolution, the format of that
main camera footage. Going to chose, Okay, here,
and leave this on auto. You can see this is now
switched to a timeline view, and then all we need
to do to complete this project setup is to bring in our footage down
into the timeline here. So we can click on
this and drag it down. And we now have our project setup that
matches that video file. So we can see at the
top here, it's ten ADP and 30 frames per second.
5. Interface Overview: Now, I just want to cover
off on the overall interface here and explain
where things are. We've already been
playing up here in our Import and media area. So this is where we can bring in all of our files and things. We can actually access
our Apple photo library, Apple Music, Apple TV, and sound effects and
everything directly from here. And you can see that there
are some sound effects and things already in
here for us to use. The next one across
is where we can access titles and generators. And don't worry, this will make more sense
as we go through. This next black box here is
our video playback monitor. So you see, as I click
down the bottom here, this is going to preview our video editing masterpiece
as we build it. On the right here, this is
really our command center where we're able to
dial everything in. This is our setting
control area. And you can see this is broken
down into video settings. There are color correction
settings, audio settings, and the information here where
we can control things like our metadata and our
timeline settings and all of that stuff is
all accessible in here. Again, don't worry.
This is going to make more sense
as we go through. Down below that, we've got
this row of buttons here, which you will be using quite a lot throughout the process. But this is where we
can do things like hoggle our effects
and transitions. So we've got a button
here for transitions, and we can turn them on and off, and we have one
here for effects. The idea is here that you're
setting this up for you. If you have a big screen and you want to have your effects
window open all the time, then yeah, we could
definitely leave that open. But if it's taking up too
much space or you want to prioritize your
timeline view more, then we can hide that
until we need it. Now, this next one is
personal preference, but I do like to have this on. I would recommend that you
do at least starting out, but it is something that
you can turn on and off. That's the audio bars
here, audio monitors. You see, as I play through this Images are grabbing people. Then we're seeing the
visual representation of how loud or how
quiet our audio is. We can turn this on
and off at any time. Personally, as I said, this
is something I like to have on just so I can
gauge where things are. With the most obvious
one down the bottom here, this is our timeline. This is where we're
going to have all of our clips and all of our editing and everything is going to take place down here, and this is where you'll be
spending most of your time.
6. Cutting Down Your Videos: The next step then is to start to trim down your video footage, to remove all the bad takes, all the mistakes,
anything that you don't want to have in
your finished video. This is kind of an
iterative process. So we're currently starting
with a lot of footage. We want to remove
all the bad stuff, so we're working with a
lesser amount of footage. We then can reshape
our story and everything so we're working
with even less footage. And every pass that we do here, you're going to be making
further adjustments and tweaks and things until we end up at our
finished product. So at this point
here, we already have our main clip in the timeline, which was used to set up our project to get
the settings right. I'm going to switch
back to our media view here where we can see our file. Going to go ahead
and delete this for now because I
want to show you that there is a couple of
different ways that we can actually bring clips
down into the timeline. So before all I did
was just clicked on our video file
and dragged it down, that's one way and
that's probably the way that I end up
using this the most. But for you, this could
be a fairly long file. This could be an hour long. What if there's only
certain sections or snippets from that that you
actually wanted to import? If we go ahead and delete this, the other way to do
it is if we select on our video clip
up the top here, we can just select the
area using these handles. You'll see if I go to either
side of the clip here, I can just drag out the
section that we actually want. So let's just say I only wanted this small
chunk of footage here. I could then click
and drag that down into the timeline instead
of the whole thing. And then maybe the next bit I want is just
down here further. So we could grab that
and bring that in. And so you could build
out your edit that way. And you could even
make that faster by using the keyboard
shortcuts I and O. So we could be playing
through our video here and let's say we
want it to start here, we press I on the keyboard
that marks an in point. Let's say we want it
to go till about here, we can press O
marks an out point, and we've now got that section
that we would bring down. Go ahead and delete these,
and let's just start it off again with our entire clip
here in the timeline. I'll stretch this back out
and let's bring this down. Now really quickly
before we start trimming this down from
the timeline here, there's a few different
tools that I want to show you because
it will make sense at different times throughout
your editing process to use different ones or to
turn some of these on or off. First one here is snapping. This is something I
do normally leave on, and it means that if you
click close to an edit, it's going to jump
straight to the edit. It's kind of assuming that that's where
you wanted to click, meaning that you can
actually do things faster because it's
going to help you out. So I normally leave snapping on, but if I need greater level
of detail or something, then I would just turn
it off for that moment. Now, while it just shows you
this magnetic timeline here, how it automatically closes
gaps and things for you, if you do actually want to have a gap in the timeline, you can. You've just got to
switch the mode here. To position. And this will let you manually
position clips. So if there's a clip here
that you didn't want to use right now and you wanted
it later in the project, maybe or just off to the side that you could grab it
if you needed it or you wanted to move
something with a gap or a spacer in there, we want to enable this mode, because now watch what happens. When I move this, it's now
created a blank clip in here. So sometimes you will want to have a gap in your
timeline because maybe extra B roll or things that you've
got added up above this. But we almost have this empty placeholder blank video clip in here that then when
we switch back to our normal arrow select
tool, we can adjust. So I just wanted to call
that out if you really want an extra level of control
and move things precisely, sometimes a blank clip
is what you need to use. But again, we can
just select on and press delete, and they're gone. The next one I want to show
you is this skimming feature. So it's currently
off, meaning that I can move my mouse
around anywhere, and nothing's really happening. If I click on
different areas here, then we can see that my
playback head, this red line, jumps to that section,
and we can see is actually happening
in that section based on the preview
monitor here. But if I turn on
this option here, skimming, which is also
S on the keyboard, then now when I move the mouse, you can see that that
red playback head is actually following the mouse. So this could be really
quick for you to skim through sections of your videos to see
where everything is without needing to click
and stop all the time. This also works up the top here. So with that skimming enabled, you can see that I can
quickly preview through to find and mark out those
clips as I just showed you, to edit even faster. So this is something that
I do normally leave on, and we can even have this
skim through our audio. So right now this is quiet.
We're not hearing anything. If I turn on skimming
with audio enabled, now we're going to
hear some sound. So again, depending
on your edit, your workflow, your
personal preferences, that is something you
could have on and might want on for some things
and then off for others. I'm going to leave
it off so that it's not super annoying for
you guys watching this. Every time I move my mouse, you're going to
get that chipmunk sped version of me talking. And the last one that's
probably worth noting is, if I just hit play now, you'll see that the timeline itself isn't moving,
that red line. The red playback indicator is. Others will want the whole
timeline to move and shift, and that's what we can turn on with this continuous scrolling. So if I hit play now, Then it's playing and the whole timeline
is moving across. Again, another one that
I personally leave off, but it's good to know
that it's there. Now, in terms of moving
around the timeline here, you can tap and swipe
on your track pad. There is also a
little slider bar down the bottom here that
you can click and drag. We can zoom in and out on our timeline using
Command plus and minus. So plus Zoom in minus Zoom out. We can see our entire edit
here for fully zoomed out. And probably one more thing that's worth noting
here is we can actually customize
up what this looks. If we click on this button here, then we have the
ability to again, zoom in and out on our timeline, but we can also change up
what our timeline looks like. So we could just
see the wave forms, the visual representation
of what's been said. And so we can switch between these different
layouts depending on your personal preference or also how complicated your
timeline is getting. If you heap of different
video layers in there, then it's probably not
going to make sense to have all of this shown. It might not fit on your screen. But we can also adjust the
size of these as well. So you can see that if
we're not working with too many layers that we
can just make this bigger. So for this tutorial to make it easier
for you guys to see, I've just made it a
little bit bigger. But if we come back to the
start of our video here, let's start to trim this down. Clearly, it's a
talking head video, and I can now see these areas down here where I'm
actually talking. So just from quick glance
and quick skim across here, I can see that this isn't
anything that I'd want to use. I'm like, testing
the microphone, making sure
everything's all good. If I play this now you hear it. Alright. We are recording. Let's check the microphone. One, two. Promise,
I'm not crazy. It's perfectly normal to
test to talk to yourself. But we don't want any of
this in the finished video. So what I can do is I could hit play and wait for it to get to the point where
I'm like, Okay, this is it. Or by looking at the audio
waveforms, I can visually see. Okay, here is where
I start talking. This is where I want
the video to start. There's a couple of different
ways that we can do this. Again, there's times it'll make sense to do things one way, other times another way. So what we can do is come back
to the start of the clip. We can click and drag
all the way through to adjust that start time to where I want the
video to start. So if we hit Play now. You can have the world's best video. That's where our video
is now starting. Now, if I undo that, I'm just
going to press Command Z. So we've undone
that now. We have all this extra stuff here
at the start that we don't. Also make cuts in our timeline. So we can press B
on the keyboard, and that's going to
give us our blade tool or our scissors. We can also access those in
the drop down menu here, and it tells you the keyboard
shortcut for each as well. So we're currently
on Blade scissors. And we can just then
with the blade tool, we can click and we've now
cut our clip at this point. It's very hard to
see, but there's a little dotted line there
that we've just cut along. And if I switch back
to our main tool, A, select A for arrow,
how I remember it, then we can see that we've now got two clips in
the timeline here. I could select the first one and press delete or
backspace, and it's gone. So you could actually go through with the blade tool,
let's press B, and you could just
click here and say, well, clearly, I don't
want any of this. So let's put a cut there, there. I can see here, I finish
talking about here, so I'm going to cut
there, and so on. We keep going through and adding cuts and
things like this. And then we can switch back
to our arrow, A for arrow, and we could then just select the ones that we don't
want like this one, delete this one, delete, and we can go through and remove those gaps and the bad
takes and things that way. And we can also use a
combination of these. If I click on this clip here, we again get that
yellow box around it, where I could adjust this. Let's say we wanted to finish a little bit earlier or
a little bit later. We can bring things back just by clicking and
dragging, as well. But I think for memory
with this clip, I actually did multiple
takes at the start. Can have the world's best video. But so let's click the
next one, as well. You could have the world
Right, so I started again. Did I do it three times? So to help you with this, no. Okay, so we don't
need the first one. The first one's gone. And so let's hear out this
entire sentence here. You could have the
world's best video, but if no one clicks on it,
no one's going to see it. So you need to get your
content clicked on, and that's when your thumbnail
strategy is so important. So to help you with this,
you need to make sure that your thumbnail images
are attention grabbing, that they stand out on YouTube. Another tool that
you can use here is called Ripple Delete. And what that will do is
essentially the same thing. So let's move this red
playback piece here to where we want to
have that cut happen, and we want to remove all of
this stuff in here, right? So let's move it to where
we want me to keep talking. And instead of clicking, adding a card, selecting deleting it, I'm going to press
on the keyboard option square bracket left. So if I press that now,
that's done the same thing. So it essentially added a cut and closed
everything back up, going to the left because I
press square bracket left. Now, the same will work
back the other way. Let's just say we had a
cut here in our timeline. So we're going to command
B to blade it there. And let's say that I was playing this through, and
I'm like, Okay, cool. I'm going to finish this here, and I want to remove everything
up to that next cut. Could do that manually or I can press our Ripple Delete tool, option square bracket
right in this case, so we're going to
remove to the right, and it will remove everything up to that next
cut that we made. So a combination of these things is going to be really
fast for you to edit. I mean, look at this big
gap here of me not talking. We can clearly remove that. So I can again blade that come up here to where
I start talking again, option square bracket left to remove to the left, and
we've just close that. Want to go ahead now and remove
any mistakes, bad takes, anything you won't use in your finished video,
that can come out now. If there's anything that you're thinking this might be used, then for now, leave
it in and you can make that judgment
call a little bit later. But what you'll end up with here is these little
chunks of footage. Now, we can actually reorder
these if you needed to. We can pick them up, we
can move them around, and it's automatically going to reposition things for you. So you can really use this to build out your story easily.
7. Adding B-Roll & Overlay Videos: The next step then
is to bring in any B roll or overlay footage. The things that we
want to show on screen on top of us
talking in this case. So I'm going to come back
up here and I'm going to import our other files. I've got our screen
recording here and our Test one movie. I'm going to make sure,
again, we're just leaving them in place, and I'm
going to import them. And so if we come back to the
start of this video here, we're talking about
thumbnail images, have the world's best video, but if no one clicks on it,
no one's going to see it. So you need to get your
content clicked on. Okay, so we're now going
to look at what can we show on screen to make
that more engaging? So I do have this video here. And if we scrub through this at the top and
I'm not clicking. I'm just moving my mouse. It's a screen recording of
someone scrolling YouTube. So, I mean, that's probably
not bad to include. So maybe we just want this
little chunk of it here, someone scrolling. Let's
start it about here. I'm going to press
I on the keyboard, and I'm just moving
my mouse across here. Okay. Out. Oh. So now
we can just bring this section and click and drag this down to our timeline, and we want to put it
on top of our clip. We could drop it in line
with if we wanted to. But if we did that,
you'll see that our audio stops
here at this point. Our narration has just
been moved along. So if we undo that and instead, we drop it on the layer above, then this is now going
to play the audio here. Then the viewer at this point is going to see this newbie role, the screen share
that we just picked, but they're still
going to hear me speaking underneath it. So just like any other
clip in our timeline, we've got those same
handles that we can adjust the start
and the end times. We can pick up the
clips, move them around. Let's take a quick look at
this if no one clicks on it, no one's going to see it. Maybe we'll bring it in
a little bit earlier. You can have the
world's best video, maybe a little bit
later about here. You can have the
world's best video, but if no one clicks on it,
no one's going to see it. Perfect. That's
looking pretty good. Let's have a look at something
for the next bit here. So you need to get your
content clicked on, and that's when your thumbnail
strategy is so important. Okay, so we need
something to do with clicking clicking
a thumbnail image. Okay, so I like
this next bit where there's some of our
thumbnail images zoomed in. Going to press I on
the keyboard there. And maybe finish it here. And let's bring that
down onto our timeline. Now, we can actually stack
these if we wanted to. And the coolest
part about the way final cut works is if
you were stacking them, you could have them really big. Everything stays
synchronized with the clip that they
are on top of. It's gonna be hard
to see, but there's this tiny little join here between the clip and where it
is placed in the timeline. So you can see that if I
move it across to this one, that clip is now
appended to this. So those clips are now
going to stay in sync. Idea is that you want to go
through your project here, and based on what
you're saying and what the viewer needs to see
to be kept engaged, you want to bring
in those clips. If you don't have the clips that would really help with
your storytelling, there's tools and
services like Envado and Artlist that have
a great library of different stock media clips, different title packs,
different music, all of that stuff that you
can then use in your videos. So definitely recommend
checking those out. We'll have links with this video to the sites and things
that we recommend for. See, we can mix and match
different clips here. We could bring in, say, this
other test clip that I have. If that fitted at that
section of the video, then we can just drag and
drop that and trim it. Maybe we could even
cut it in half if we needed to so you can
split your clips. All of the tools
I've just shown you applied to all of
this stuff, too. But one thing to note here is that there is actually audio. We can see audio here
with both of these clips. So what I would
recommend you doing at the time of bringing these in is just muting the audio unless you
wanted the audio on them. This is going to
save you from coming back later when there's so many different clips
and things and trying to work out noise is coming from. You can actually do this individually on a
clip by clip basis. So we can select our clip here. We move our mouse cursor
down to this line, and you can see that we now get these two arrows as
our mouse cursor. If we pull this down,
that's our volume level. We can turn it down to nothing. We also have the
ability to select the clip to come over here
to our audio controls, and then we've got
a slider here for volume to lower it, as well. And we can also do
multiple clips at a time. So if I click and
drag from out here, I can select multiple clips, and then we come back
up to that same place, volume, and we lower it, and you can see that we're
lowering it for both. We will get to the
actual volume controls and all that stuff
a little bit later. But with your B roll clips, especially as these things build out and you're
layering them up, it's a good idea to
mute them at the time, if they've got audio
that you don't want. If there's audio
that you do want, but it might be too loud
or anything like that, we're not going to
mess with that now, get it in the place or
close to where you want it, and we'll adjust
the volume levels all in one go a little later. So you want to go ahead now
and bring in any other clips, any other stock footage or anything like that to
build out this timeline?
8. Adding Text & Titles: A the next step is to bring in any titles or texts and add them
into your video. So I'm going to come back to the very start here
and I'm going to come up to the titles area here. And in here, there's lots
of different preset titles and looks and animations and things that you
can actually use, just dragon drop and
customize up in your video. For this one, I'm just
going to go basic text. You can see even
with basic text, there's a few different
examples here. I'm going to choose this one, which is just plain
text and then click and drag that
down into my timeline. And you'll see that this is
now positioned above those, but it's starting before it. So how the layering
works is you're going to see whatever
is on the top. So right now, if we
have a look here, we can see that that text is on top of that B roll clip here. So we're actually
seeing that text. If it was pulled underneath
it, so we drop it down there, then our text disappears at that point because this
clip here is blocking it. So just something
to be aware of. Let's bring it back to the top, and let's double
click on it so we can edit it or we
could select on it and come back over
to the options at the top and we can
change the text. Type in my name. We
can choose your name, all of this stuff that you would expect here to customize
up your titles. You can see we also have
the ability to switch it to three D to change the
coloring and everything. Now, with these menus, you can see that
there's not really much happening under face,
right? Like what's face. But if we come over here
where it says show, then this is where
we can change color, change what it looks like, blur the text or any of this stuff. So if we wanted to
make this a blue, something like our
primal video blue, we can easily do then in terms
of sizing and positioning, we can do this with the
sliders and things here. You got position,
rotation, scale, or we can actually
just click on the text itself and move it
to where we want it, and you can scale it
down from here as well. So if we have a look at this
now and we hit play on this, you could have the world's best. We've now got some text
showing up on screen. Now obviously, when we
jump to this next one, we probably want that gone, so we can just shorten
that clip down, and it's going to finish the
time that this clip appears. But likewise, if we find that we want to readjust some things, it's easy to pick things up
to adjust the start times, the end times, to get everything the way that you want it as you're building
this out over time. Coming back up here to titles. There are some pretty fancy
titles and things in here as well that we can
really use as openers. They call them dynamic titles. And we can customize all
of this stuff up, as well. Again, it's just drag and
drop into your timeline, even different
sidebar ones as well, where we could bring out
bullet lists and things. He's a bullet list
one. And we can combine these. We
could layer these up. There's also stuff in
here for social media, like a title screen, lower third graphics like this that animate in, again,
fully customizable. So you want to go
ahead now and add in any text or titles
into your videos. Now, we'll show you a
little bit later how we can do this text effect, but have it appear
behind the person.
9. Applying Transitions & Effects: Next up, we're going to look
at transitions and effects. So a transition is
something that will help two shots transition
between them, right? Pretty obvious when we
look at the naming of it. So if we come over
here to transitions, make sure that we're
able to see this, there's so many different
types of transitions in here. Again, we can see what they look like we put our mouse over them. You'll see that one
shot disappears and the other one appears. Is a bloom one or it
just gets really bright, and then the next shot comes some in here that are
going to look pretty good. There's some in here that are
going to look pretty cheap. I would say use these sparingly, where it's adding to the video, helping you tell your story, change the mood, whatever it is. Don't just do what an amateur person does and
load them in every 2 seconds. It's going to make your
video very hard to watch. So a great simple one is
just this cross dissolve. And to apply it, all
we need to do is just click and drag it onto
our timeline here, either onto the join in a clip or onto one
of our B Roll clips, where it's automatically
going to put it at the start and the end
of that clip for you. So if we look at this now
and we scrub through this, you can see it's now
fading in to that shot, and then it will fade
out at the end of. If you don't want to
have it at the end, let's just click on
it and press Delete. If you want it to go for
a longer period of time, we can drag that out or
shorter period of time. So you've got a great amount of flexibility in here as well. But also, if we click
on that transition, then you can manually
dial things in and change some settings
on them as well. So this area up here changes to whatever you've got
selected in your timeline. We can also add these on our
primary timeline, as well. Pick something different,
just so you can see the impact this would have
if we played this now. If someone sees, they
can work out Right. So we've transitioned
between those two shots. Now, it's not really
that good in this case, because both shots are
almost exactly the same. So we wouldn't normally use a
transition when both shots, both camera angles and
everything, are the same. They noally transport they're
normally to transition someone one scene like daytime to nighttime or
something completely different. So instead of adding even a cross dissolve or
anything like here, where you can see it kind of just goes a little bit weird. And what we do with our
YouTube videos is we'll pick one of these two and we'll just zoom in
on one of them, just so it looks a
little bit different. So I'm going to pick this
second clip here now, and I'm going to come
to the transform area, so I want to make sure
we're on video, transform. I'm going to come down
here to scale all. So we want to scale both
the X and Y at once. So scale all. Now, you see, I'm making this change,
but we're not seeing it. Because the clip
is selected here, the playback indicator
is over here. So we do want to make
sure that we are clicking here somewhere so that we're actually previewing
the right clip. So now when we scale in, we go from 100%,
that was standard. Let's come up a little bit. Now, you don't want to
go too far, especially depending on how
you've shot this. You might be losing a
little bit of quality or something like that,
but a little bit is fine. I would then try to line up the eyes when it's
something like this. So it's less jarring for people watching we'll watch other
people through their eyes. So let's just play this
now. Scenario that they can work out exactly.
Okay, so not bad. We could probably spend a
little bit more time just adjusting this get a little bit closer, but
you get the idea. It's broken pattern. It's now just a boring shot
with just a hard jump. Actually zoomed in, and
it will make it feel like a different camera angle or
just a little bit different, different enough
to be interesting. So you can actually just
go through and apply that setting to each
of the clips that you would want to zoom in
on or you can actually copy and paste effects
and settings as well. So with this clip that we have applied this transform
setting two, we can actually copy
that, choose edit copy, and it's actually
copied the entire clip, but it's also copied all the
settings and things for it. And let's say that we wanted to apply it to this clip
here on the end. So we'll pick this one here
and let's choose Edit. Let's choose paste. We can go paste effects
and that we'll apply all the effects that on that original clip
that we copied, or if we choose
paste attributes, then we get to choose. So right now, we only want to paste in the position
and the scale. Those are the two that
we made changes to, and we can choose paste, and now those are
applied to this clip. You can see this
one has that zoom in now applied to it as well. So you can actually
do this in bulk. You don't have to set
this up every time. But also, this is where
I'd be going back to our original clip
here where we had this B Roll here was talking about getting your
thumbnails clicked on. What I would do at this point here is I'd probably
zoom in on this. Again, we want to click
here so we can preview this and we could scale this up and maybe we adjust the
positioning a bit here so that's framed up a bit
better or at least showing the thumbnail image
is big at that point. With these settings and things
that we've applied here, you can actually
animate them as well, using what's called keyframes I don't want to get too
complicated too quick here, but we can create some simple
animations here with this. So let's just say that we're happy with this now
where it's starting. So what we can do is
create a keyframe here at this start point where this is set the way that we want
this to be at the start. So we want to set a
keyframe for the position, where we can set one
for the scale as well or any of the things
that we might want to change. You can actually just
turn them all on. We've kind of locked
it at that point. So what we've just told
it with the keyframes is at the start of this clip, that's exactly the place, the position, the rotating the scale that we
want this clip. But over time, we want it to move to let's
say about here, we can add some new keyframes, and it will transition
between those two or move between those
two lots of settings. So let's just say that
with this one here, at this point in time now, we want it scrolled down
more so we can this one, and let's maybe go to here, just for the purposes
of this video. So now when we scroll
back through here, you can see that that
movement is happening. So it is really easy
then to be able to zoom back in or move things around or
have something spin. This is how we do
it with key frames. Now, in terms of other
effects and things, we do have a dedicated
panel here for effects. There's lots of
different things in here from different looks. We've got all of our blur
controls in here if we want to blur something out,
different lighting options. You can see we've got
some light balls, booker floating
through the screen here if we're going
to use that one. So it is worth clicking
through these just to see the types of
things that you can do. Personally, I don't
use these too much, but it is good to know
access to in here. Now, in terms of other types of effects like your speed control, if you want to speed something up or slow it down, a clip, then we can just select a clip, and we can come up here to
our speed control area. So if we press on this, we've got the ability
to choose some presets, so we can adjust from
100% is normal speed. We go lower than that, it's going to start
to slow it down. Got here 100% and even says it. If we want to speed things
up, we're going above 100%. So you can either pick
one of these presets here or you can choose custom, and you'll see we get
this extra panel on here. We can either then type in
the amount in a percentage. We can choose if we're
going forward or reverse. So if you want to clip
to play backwards, we could just set it to reverse. We can do it based on
the amount of time. So the duration, how long do
I want this clip to go for? And then it'll calculate what the percentage or amount of speeding up or
slowing down is. But we can also do it down
here in our actual timeline. So we've got this now
speed bar at the top here. I can click on the end here
and I can shorten this clip, meaning that it's going
to play it back faster, or I can slow it down
by dragging it out. And you can see that the
speed now is at 45%. If you are slowing
down a clip that wasn't recorded in slow motion, this new AI feature, a function here in Final
Cut is absolutely amazing, and I would strongly
recommend your turning it on. Right now, if we
play this, let's just give you a
worst case scenario. Let's drag it out a bit longer. So we're down to 24%. So I'm going to
hit play on this, ignore the audio behind it. You can see it's
not fluid at all. It's very stilted, very jittery. It's going to make a cut in the timeline here at this point. So we're just processing
this piece of this now. But what I can do
here with this drop down and come back here
to custom is that we can change the video quality
from fast to optical flow, which is okay and was
previously the best option. Now I don't use it. Since
the introduction of the AI, which is the machine learning, this is the one I
would recommend you use if you've
got this option. So if we press this now, it's now going to process. You can see it's
analyzing, but it's adding all these extra frames in here
to really make this good. So if we take a look at
this now, not perfect. There was something a little
weird happened with my hand. But the rest of it
really, really clear. And look, moving water is one of the hardest things that you can actually have the AI to process. So this is just crazy. So if you've got something
that you want slowed down, make sure you're enabling
that machine, the AI piece. So that's the speeding
up and the slowing down. Let's say that you want to
stabilize a shaky clip. We can again select our clip. I'll pick this one over here. Doesn't have any other effects applied to it at the moment. We can then come up here
to our video controls. Down here, we've
got stabilization. So we can turn this on and
we've got more options. We can then choose
smooth Cam and we can adjust much smoothness. So this is going to come down to how shaky your footage is, but just know that the more
that you're enhancing this, the more that you're
taking anti shake out, if it's something
that's really bad, the worse the results
are going to be. It does a good job if
it's just something that's maybe handicamed that you want to stabilize and
have it look like it was on a tripod or was a drone
shot or something like that. Does a great job at that,
but you really need to dial it in up or down from
here depending on the clip. But probably my favorite
effect and so many people are using right now is the
background removal tool. So let's just go ahead
and delete this clip here so we can see our other clips in the bottom timeline here. I'm going to pick
this last clip. Let's say we want to remove
the background on this clip. All I need to do is again, make sure we're on the
effects area here. Let's come down to
masks and keying. And what we're looking for
is this magnetic mask. Let's drag that onto our clip, and then up in the top here, we get a different
cursor, this eyedropper. We can just click on our person or the object
we want to select, and then we can
analyze that clip. So it's selected through
our entire clip. You can see that's
processing there now. Love that it's doing
the auto tracking and following any hand movements
and all of that stuff, too. So now that's done, we've
got options up here where we can change things if we want
to reverse the selection. So if I want the
background selected, not me, then we could do that. But just already by default, without changing anything else, if I deselect this now, you'll see that the background has been removed on this clip, which means that we can
bring in another background. So if I come over here to
the titles and generators, let's come down to generators. I'm going to pick backgrounds actually
dynamic backgrounds. Why not? Okay, let's
just grab this one. Let's drag this
down into our time. Because this clip here is
in our bottom timeline, our main story line
and isn't treated as B Roll and lifted up,
we do need to lift it up. So we can click and drag it up so that it's sitting on
top of this other clip, and you'll see now
that we now have me talking with a different
background there behind it. So this is really cool.
But some other uses for this could be to blow out the background or to put text behind you or the
person presenting. So let's duplicate this clip. I'm going to select on it, I'm going to choose Edit, copy. I'm going to come down
a little bit further in our timeline and
choose Edit Paste. Going to bring this one back
to our main story line, and I'm going to bring
this clip over on top of it because these
two clips are identical. The bottom one,
though, we still have that magnetic mask applied. So I'm going to either
deselect it here and it's gone or I can select it and delete it, and
it's totally gone. But now our clip here
will look normal, because the top one here
has the background removed, but the background showing
through from the bottom one. Which means that we can
select the bottom one here, and let's come
over here to blur, and let's apply a Gaussian
blur to the background. And you can see we've it. So I'm going to pick here, let's come up and adjust it
because it looks too bad. Let's just make it a
little bit blurry, something like this,
and now hit play. Text or too much happening. Your viewers are going to click on something else. Pretty cool. So we'd also then
have the ability to bring our text in
between these two. I'm going to go ahead
and remove this clip. And let's go and grab
our text from the start. I'm going to copy that,
pressing Command C. Let's come back to the end here. I'm just going to paste it here. I'm going to pick it up and
move it between these two. Now, we can stretch it out so that it fits that same amount. You can see now it's behind me. So let's make it bigger. We can adjust position
of the text so we can even have this using
the keyframes, ameacross. But you can see now
that we've now got the ability to put things
actually into the scene here. Maybe we will put it onto two lines and let's
put it up here. As I'm talking, you can see that there's a little bit of extra
polish there on the shot. We probably we go
the other side, so the bookshelf
is not in the way. This way, you can have some
pretty engaging titles that look pretty
professional really quickly. Again, at this point,
we're going through adding in any effects, any transitions, any background removals,
all your stabilization, all the fun stuff. This happens now. Then
we go through and do another pass and
refine our edit further. So this point, we're starting
to get pretty close.
10. Music, Sound Effects & Volume Levels: This is then where
we're now bringing in any music or sound
effects into our edit. So I'm going to go
ahead and import a music track back
up the top here, File, Import media and
go ahead and find. I've got a music track
here from Epidemic Sound. This is a great
place where we get a lot of our YouTube
music and stuff from. I'm choose Import File. Now, depending on which version
of Final Cut you're on, if you're on the
Creator Studio one, the subscription,
there is music files and things that
you can download. If you come up the top
to Final Cut Pro Menu. There's an option in here to
download content library. Got my music track
here imported. Let's scroll back to the
start of our project here, so we're dropping
in at the start, and we want to bring
it down to the bottom. Again, this is tied to the first clip that you're
putting it underneath. So you can see that the music here is linked to that
clip now as well. So if we're moving
anything around, it's going to stay
synchronized to that. But just like any clip, we can adjust the
start, the end, we can trim it, all of those usual things
with our music tracks. Let's come across
further because I would imagine our video finishes and our music track is
going to keep going. We can use that ripple delete or blade here to cut our clip, press delete, and it's gone.
Do want to watch this. You see that
automatically generated a longer gap clip here for us. We want to be mindful
that we don't have any of these
things left at the end of our edit because
it's going to create this blank time here for us. So select that and
let's delete it to our video actually
finishes at this point. Okay, so we're bringing
in our music tracks. It could be multiple
music tracks. We're also bringing
in any sound effects. And there are actually
some sound effects in here in Final Cut. You can see all kinds
of different ones, so we can just click and drag those down into our project. Again, we want to have
them down here somewhere. It doesn't matter
where if they're below the music or
above the music. But typically, you want
all your audio stuff down below and video stuff up so let's
say we had a couple of these sound effects and things in here
when we want them. Again, they could be trimmed down and customized
up as you want. But what you would
do now once you've got those in where
you want them, and there could be a lot
that you're adding in here, depending on what
you're building, is that we'll then do
another pass of our video. We're playing through,
and we might make some minor adjustments to
things to match the music, to match the beat because your music is really
going to give vibe, the feeling, the emotion behind what people are watching
and what they're hearing. The music can be a big piece. Once you've got them all in,
this is where we're going to dial in our volume levels on everything to really
get everything exactly where it needs to
be and where you want it. So to do that, what I'm
normally doing, though, is I'm selecting all of my
audio files, the music, and everything, and I'm just dropping the volume on
them down to nothing. Or I'm pressing V on the keyboard to disable
those for right now. Because what we want
to do first off, even though we've just
placed them in there, is we want to get
the volume level right on our spoken piece first, so we know that that's right
and at the perfect level. And then we can bring in our music and sound effects
to match that so that it's not too
overpowering or too much or too loud and distorting
and annoying for people, we can dial that
in as a secondary. So we want to mute or disable
our other audio files. So we're just left here with our primary camera footage here. I'm going to come back to
the start of our clip. I would want to make sure here
that I'm playing this with our audio bars on so that I can see this
visual representation, and I'm hitting play
ideally with headphones on, so we get a true representation of what everything sounds like. And I'm pressing play, but I'm watching the volume
levels over here. Can have the world's best video. Pretty much exactly
where we want it, where it's going
between the minus six here and the zero without
going above the zero. Above the zero means
it's too loud, and it's going to be
distorting and sound bad. The other way that we can check
that our audio levels are fine is actually by looking
at this audio waveform here, and we can see those
spikes and watch what happens when I increase
the volume level here. Then we start to go into
the yellow and to the red. Anything in the red is too loud. If you're seeing any red, it definitely wants to come down so that we're
removing all of that. So this is the other
way that you can do it. You can see our volume level
here at zero is perfect. So we can either adjust
our volume levels here as a clip by clip basis, where we're selecting the clip, adjusting the volume
here in the timeline, or we're coming up here to audio and using this
slider to adjust it. And even up in here, we can see this visual representation
here as well. So we can see that we start to get some bits here in the red. Too loud. So we back
it off a little. So we can do it on a
clip by clip basis, or if it was the same
camera and everything, you can again copy the effects, so we can choose edit, copy. We can then select all the remaining clips from
that same camera, same audio source, and
we can choose edit, paste attributes, and we can just select
audio volume so that all of our volume levels across that entire clip or clips
are exactly the same. Also have the ability
just to select the clips and to manually adjust them
all from up here as well. Now, from here, the next thing I would bring back is the music, and I would do this before I bring back the sound effects. And this is really the
piece that I would want headphones on because there's
no real right or wrong. This is a creative piece. This is art of how loud
your music should be. And each music track is
going to be different. And we can see already
just looking at this. This one starts
quieter and then gets louder and then gets quieter
again and gets louder. So I like that you can
visually see these things. But where I like to
start with the music as a general is around -30, again, give or take
for the music track. And then we press play, we see what it sounds like, and we can go up and down from here. Now, just as we use
keyframes earlier for animating this
section of our video, we can use keyframes to adjust our volume levels and
effects and things as well. But there's also
a faster way than manually adding the
keyframes with audio. We can actually use the
Range Selector tool. So on the keyboard or we come
up here to Range selection, and we can draw out an area that we want to
make an adjustment. Let's just say that we're happy with this volume
level all the way through, but in this section here,
let's just map it out. Let's draw and clicking and dragging with that range
selection tool on. In this section,
we want it louder. I can then with that
selected with this tool, increase it, and it's only increasing it for that section. And the same will work
back the other way. Let's pick another range.
Let's go from here to here. Let's say that we want
no music at that point. Let's lower that down. Now if you zoom in
and look at this, it's not even just a hard cut. It's created those
keyframes for us, and it's fading up or fading in at that point,
automatically for us. So that range selection tool is a massive timesaver if you want to really get granular on your volume controls and things. So then at this point, I'll be doing the same with
the sound effects, and I would be adjusting the
volumes for those to where I needed them and the same for any of our B Roll clips up here. If we wanted sound like the waves in the background
or something here, then I would be dialing that in so we can remove the
sound from this one. In regards to the sound as well, if we come back
to our arrow tool and let's select
one of the clips, up here under the audio panel, we do have a really powerful
tool called voice isolation. So if you are recording
in a noisy environment and you want to remove some of that background noise, this
does a really good job. Actually, why don't we grab
that beach clip Test one. I'm just going to put this at
the end of our video here, and let's just do a before
and after to show you how powerful this is.
Guess, this is a test. There is lots of background
noise here and a rainbow. Okay, so the audio is not
great. Select on this. Let's come up. Let's put on voice isolation.
Let's enable that. And let's just have a look
again at that audio waveform. This is the original
with it not on. And you can see, as I
start to increase this, there's the background noise
here that has dropped out. So let's play this now. This
is fairly high. It's 99%. I wouldn't ever recommend
using it at 99%, but let's have a listen to it with all the background
noise removed. Guess the test, there is lots of background noise
here and a rainbow. Okay, so it has totally removed
all the background noise. That does sound a
little robotic. There's another one
of those AI tools. But it also is unrealistic
because clearly, I'm filming at the
beach, there's wind, there's waves, all
of that stuff. So you would expect
some background noise. So let's drop it
down to about 62%. And now let's listen.
Guess the test. There is lots of
background noise here. It's so much easier
to hear, man, I'd probably even drop it a bit more so there's a bit
more background noise. Guess the test, there is lots
of background noise here. Yeah, so much better. And if we turn this
off and go back to the original just to give you
before and after here, Just as a test?
That's the original. So huge improvement. But you can also use it even if you're recording in an area like this where there's not really
background noise, but there might be a
little bit of echo. Then we can use that just
again, at a low setting, maybe 10% or 20%, and it will make your
audio sound better, too.
11. Adjusting Color: The last main thing
that we need to do here is adjust any
of the colors, do any color grading,
color correcting. And we save this
until last so that we're not putting a big
burden on our system to have to process every
frame of the video with those adjustments
that we make while we're still back editing. So that's why this is saved to one of the last steps
in the process. Again, we want to apply this
to the first clip first. So we select the first
over here under effects, there are different looks. So there's even a
category here called Looks where if we
have a look at these, you can see they're
almost kind of like Instagram
filters and things, different looks that
you could apply. So if you do find
something in here that you like the look of, then yeah, by all means, you can click
and drag that onto your clip, and you can run with that. Personally, though, I
don't use any of those. And instead, I would
come up here to the color correction
panel, the color panel. And then in here, there's a few different
options you've got. This is the new
default panel here, which shows up, and
that's probably where I recommend
most people leave it. But there's also
some really powerful professional tools
in here as well. If we hit this little
drop down arrow, we've got a color board, which is going to let us adjust individual colors and
different sections of that. So right now I pick
the black ones, or adjusting the blacks. We can adjust those
and brighten them up and change the colors
and all of that stuff. We could also choose
color wheels, and again, just another set of controls
to allow you to dial things. Can actually stack
multiple of these effects. We can have color wheels and we could have some of the other
ones applied here too. But the main one that I use, and I would say is probably the best or rounder for most people, especially without
overwhelming you or anything in here is the color
adjustments panel, the main one here because it just makes
it really easy for you to do things like
adjust the exposure, the brightness, the
contrast, all of that stuff. You could really just go
through manually here and make these adjustments to get it looking the
way that you'd like. That's not. There is also
some really cool AI features in here where it
would automatically analyze your shot
and do that for you. So I'm just going to reset this. I'm going to hit the little
drop down and choose reset. So we're back to all zeros here, and I'm going to hit here,
enhance light and color. And so that's what
it is thinking is the best adjustment
based on the AI, looking at the
scene, the lights, skin tones, all of that stuff. And it's not. What
I like about it is it's giving me here
the adjustments. It's not just making them. I can actually see what
adjustments it made. And then I could choose
to say, You know what? That's still probably
a little bit dark, but I could boost that up a bit. Or maybe the saturation's
a little low. Maybe I want to bring out
some colors a bit more, and I could boost that up a bit. So if we go before and after now, there's
a huge difference. And it was just really
simple adjustments from my end once the AI had
done the first pass. Again, what we can
do here is we can either save this as a preset. So it'll show up as
a preset down here, a template that we can
drag on like an effect, or because we've applied
these just to the first clip, we could copy and paste them
to the remaining clips. So that's what
I'll do. I'm going to choose Command C to copy. I'm going to select the
remainder of these. I'm going to choose
edit, paste attributes. This time, the only
one I want because we disabled the other is
the color adjustments, and we paste that in, and now they all
have that same look or color adjustments applied. Same goes for your B Roll clips, you can select an
individual clip, and you can make the adjustments to that
either manually or using the automatic
adjustment and then tweaking it beyond
there as needed.
12. Exporting Your Video: So now that all that's
done, the last step is to export and save
out our project. So we can come up here
to the Share button. And you see there's a few
different options in here, but the one I recommend
you use is Export File. And we can customize
everything up from here. Now, we can give our video
a name here where it says Justin's Edit that
just went off what we called our timeline or
our project here before. But the main piece here
is over under settings. And then in here there's a few different options
that we can set. So the first one
here under format, this is broken down into
three different categories. We've got mastering,
so saving out a final master version
of your video. Got publishing and
we've got broadcast. And so broadcast would
be if you're going to broadcast Networks or Netflix
or something like that. You want the absolute
best quality thing out, then you've got an
MXF file for that. That's probably likely not
many people watching this. So then, really the
choice becomes, do we want publishing and do
we want social platforms? Or do we want mastering? And if it's mastering, do
we want just the video, the audio, or do we want to save out the audio and the
video, which is, again, most likely what I would
imagine main difference between the social platforms and the mastering version is
the options you have. And also the file
sizes are a little bit smaller in the social platforms. And so if we pick
social platforms here, you can then see that we
can choose our video codec. So the default right now
is h264, single pass. Unless you need one of
the other options here, that's probably a fair
one to leave it on. You can then specify
your video resolution. Now this is based on our
project settings which were set from the main primary camera footage right
back at the start. So this 1920 by 1080, it's suggesting that
based on our project, Ben 1920 by 1080. Really where I'm using this the most where I would imagine most people would want to leave this is under video and audio. So you're getting a slightly higher quality
video that you can use on your social
media platforms and use as a decent backup
of your video as well. But then under the
Codec setting here, this is where this
gets pretty crazy. Again, for most people,
most use cases, the h264 setting here
is going to be fine. So you can see that our
video here right now is going to be 146 megabytes
on the computer. If we wanted the absolute
best quality out of this, then we could use
some of the PRs one. So if I click it
here to ProRes four, 22 HQ, you can see that this goes up to
nearly 1.5 gigabytes. So it's a much larger file. So for most things like YouTube, social media, videos,
or anything like that, you'll be fine
leaving this on h264, and then we hit next, and we choose where on the computer, we're
going to save this. So I can put it here
in my downloads, choose Save, and that's
going to save the video out. Now, if we want to see
the progress of that, it's this little thing up
in the top corner here, which we can click
on, and we can see that was actually
a really quick export. With a more complicated
timeline, longer edit. And depending on the system that you're using and
how powerful it is, that could take quite
a bit longer as well. So once that export is done, the default setting
is that that opens that video file up
for you to preview, to make sure everything
is all good. If you're happy with it, then that's when you can release.
13. Reformatting for Different Platforms: Now, there's one more thing that
I want to show you in here, which I think is really
powerful, if, say, you've created a widescreen
video like we have here now, if we wanted to repurpose
this for portrait, so we want to convert it
from a widescreen video to a portrait video, there is actually a feature
in here that uses AI to help you reformat your videos for you. So the way that we do that we find our
timeline in here. So we scroll up here
Justin's Edit, the project, and we want to
right click on it, and we want to choose
duplicate project as. So we do this at the end
of having a project. Then we're going to duplicate
it and make a copy of it, but we need to choose
duplicate project as, not just duplicate
project, right? So we pick and let's call this
Justin's Edit portrait. Now, in here, when
we choose video, we can now choose
a vertical format, and we can choose the
qualities the resolution. I'm going to keep this
here as 1920 by 1080. But the trick here or
the tool here is when we tick this box Smart conform. This is where it's
going to analyze the clips and reformat and reframe everything for us based on what's actually
happening in our videos. So we can choose o, and
now that's going through, and that's processing that
clip or that timeline for us. What we have here is
our original edit, Justin's Edit, and we've now got our new one Justin's
Edit portrait. So now if we go ahead and
open up the portrait version, make sure you've switched
your timelines here, you'll see that we now have even the titles
have been moved, our Bro has all been adjusted. I'm actually centered up in the shot here, even with my move this clip here has been framed, so my head is in the center. If we went back to the original, maybe I'll open
the original here. You'll see that I'm not
centered in here at all. And as we scrub through this, there's sections here where I'm really not in the center at all. So it's reframed all of our shots here
automatically for us. So then all we need
to do is obviously move anything that
doesn't quite line up. So let's just say
we wanted to make a minor adjustment to this one. I could select the clip, come over here to
our video controls, and then we've got
our position here, X and Y. I could just
adjust the X position. Make sure I've
clicked on that clip. And we can tweak
that as we need to. So that's a really
fast and easy way that you can use the
AI features inside a final cut to help you repurpose your widescreen
videos to portrait.
14. Wrapping Up: So wrapping up this
final cut pro training, a couple of quick things. If you found this
training valuable, I would really
appreciate you taking the 30 seconds to
leave us a review. It can make a huge difference in helping others find
this training, too. You can also share any of your top tips or
takeaways and things that you've learned along the way to help others going through
this training as well. And if you want to see
the other master classes and courses we have
here on Skillshare, you can access those up
in our profile area. So a massive thank you for taking this course here with us, and I wish you the
best with your videos.