Apple M8728Z/A User Manual - Page 158

Ensuring Cut List Accuracy with 3:2 Pull-Down or 24 & 1 Video

Page 158 highlights

If you are editing your project as multiple sequences (for example, one sequence for each reel), it's best to place all the sequences together before exporting a duplicate list. This way Cinema Tools can find duplicate usages across the entire feature. An easy approach is to place all the sequences into a nested sequence before generating a duplicate list. However, when you intend to export a film list, do not nest part of one sequence into another sequence. Only whole-sequence nesting is supported when you export a Cinema Tools list. See the Final Cut Pro documentation for information about creating a nested sequence. Ensuring Cut List Accuracy with 3:2 Pull-Down or 24 & 1 Video With 3:2 pull-down NTSC video or 24 & 1 PAL video (also known as 24 @ 25 pull-down video in Final Cut Pro), a film frame that is matched back from your edits may turn out to be the one before or the one after your original edit point. (See Frame Rate Basics for an explanation.) With 3:2 pull-down NTSC video, you can avoid such match-back inaccuracies by using the Cinema Tools Reverse Telecine feature or third-party reverse telecine hardware to reverse the 3:2 telecine pull-down before you begin editing. If you did not reverse the 3:2 pull-down in NTSC video (or if you are working with 24 & 1 PAL video), you can still avoid cut list inaccuracies through careful editing. Your goal for each clip is to make sure that the frame showing the slate, or the last frame of the previous shot, doesn't end up in the final film: • When setting edit points for a clip, be careful not to place the In point at the first good frame in the clip, or the Out point at the last frame. In other words, set the In point at least one frame after your shot starts and the Out point at least one frame before the last frame in the shot. • If you must edit on the first or last frame of a shot, make a note of the key number from the window burn, and review the cut list later to confirm that the key number is the same in the cut list. • Avoid putting In or Out points at frames with two fields that came from two different frames of the film. For example, don't place an edit at a BC or CD frame. 158 Chapter 9 Editing with Final Cut Pro

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If you are editing your project as multiple sequences (for example, one sequence for each
reel), it’s best to place all the sequences together before exporting a duplicate list. This
way Cinema Tools can find duplicate usages across the entire feature. An easy approach
is to place all the sequences into a nested sequence before generating a duplicate list.
However, when you intend to export a film list, do not nest part of one sequence into
another sequence. Only whole-sequence nesting is supported when you export a
Cinema Tools list. See the Final Cut Pro documentation for information about creating a
nested sequence.
Ensuring Cut List Accuracy with 3:2 Pull-Down or 24 & 1 Video
With 3:2 pull-down NTSC video or 24 & 1 PAL video (also known as
24 @ 25 pull-down
video in Final Cut Pro), a film frame that is matched back from your edits may turn out
to be the one before or the one after your original edit point. (See
Frame Rate Basics
for
an explanation.)
With 3:2 pull-down NTSC video, you can avoid such match-back inaccuracies by using
the Cinema Tools Reverse Telecine feature or third-party reverse telecine hardware to
reverse the 3:2 telecine pull-down before you begin editing.
If you did not reverse the 3:2 pull-down in NTSC video (or if you are working with 24 & 1
PAL video), you can still avoid cut list inaccuracies through careful editing. Your goal for
each clip is to make sure that the frame showing the slate, or the last frame of the previous
shot, doesn’t end up in the final film:
• When setting edit points for a clip, be careful not to place the In point at the first good
frame in the clip, or the Out point at the last frame. In other words, set the In point at
least one frame after your shot starts and the Out point at least one frame before the
last frame in the shot.
• If you must edit on the first or last frame of a shot, make a note of the key number from
the window burn, and review the cut list later to confirm that the key number is the
same in the cut list.
• Avoid putting In or Out points at frames with two fields that came from two different
frames of the film. For example, don’t place an edit at a BC or CD frame.
158
Chapter 9
Editing with Final Cut Pro