Apple M8728Z/A User Manual - Page 212

Using 24p Video with Final Cut Pro and Cinema Tools, Using Final Cut Pro as a 24p Online Editor

Page 212 highlights

Even if your Final Cut Pro system is not configured to edit uncompressed 24p video, it can serve as an offline editor and export a 24 fps EDL to be used by a 24p online editing system. Even better, if your 24p online editing system uses Final Cut Pro, you can simply copy the project from the offline system, allowing you to preserve far more information about the edit than with an EDL alone. See Using Final Cut Pro as a 24p Online Editor and Using Final Cut Pro as a 24p Offline Editor for more information about each option. Using 24p Video with Final Cut Pro and Cinema Tools Final Cut Pro and Cinema Tools give you the ability to handle various situations related to editing 24p video: • Importing 24 fps EDLs: Use for performing an online edit of 24p material that has been offlined on another system. See Using Final Cut Pro as a 24p Online Editor for more information. • Exporting 24 fps EDLs: Use for performing an offline edit of 24p material with a 24 fps editing timebase. See Using Final Cut Pro as a 24p Offline Editor for more information. • Converting an EDL to or from 24 fps: Use for performing an offline edit of 24p material using an NTSC editing timebase or for doing an online edit of 24p material that has been offlined on an NTSC system. See Using Final Cut Pro as a 24p Offline Editor for more information. • Removing 2:3:3:2 or 2:3:2:3 pull-down: Use if you are capturing your source clips from a digital video camcorder that applied 2:3:3:2 or 2:3:2:3 pull-down to 24p video. This feature cleanly eliminates the redundant frame fields created by the pull-down, without any recompression, so you can edit at 23.98 fps or 24 fps. See Working with 2:3:3:2 Pull-Down for more information. • Adding pull-down: Use to output 23.98 fps video in a format that you can play on an NTSC device, such as an NTSC monitor, and to record it as 29.97 fps video. This feature lets you output 23.98 fps video via FireWire at the NTSC standard of 29.97 fps video. See Pull-Down Patterns You Can Apply to 23.98 fps Video for more information. • Creating an audio EDL when using dual system sound: Use if you intend to recapture the audio elsewhere for final processing. See Using Audio EDLs for Dual System Sound for more information. Using Final Cut Pro as a 24p Online Editor An important consideration when using Final Cut Pro as your online editor is how to import the offline edit information. When using a separate system as the offline editor, there are three methods you can use to get edit information from the offline system (presented in order of preference): • Copy the project: Can be used when a separate Final Cut Pro system is the offline system and you used a 24 fps editing timebase for the offline edit. 212 Chapter 13 Working with 24p Video and 24 fps EDLs

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Even if your Final Cut Pro system is not configured to edit uncompressed 24p video, it
can serve as an offline editor and export a 24 fps EDL to be used by a 24p online editing
system. Even better, if your 24p online editing system uses Final Cut Pro, you can simply
copy the project from the offline system, allowing you to preserve far more information
about the edit than with an EDL alone.
See
Using Final Cut Pro as a 24p Online Editor
and
Using Final Cut Pro as a 24p Offline
Editor
for more information about each option.
Using 24p Video with Final Cut Pro and Cinema Tools
Final Cut Pro and Cinema Tools give you the ability to handle various situations related
to editing 24p video:
Importing 24 fps EDLs:
Use for performing an online edit of 24p material that has been
offlined on another system. See
Using Final Cut Pro as a 24p Online Editor
for more
information.
Exporting 24 fps EDLs:
Use for performing an offline edit of 24p material with a 24 fps
editing timebase. See
Using Final Cut Pro as a 24p Offline Editor
for more information.
Converting an EDL to or from 24 fps:
Use for performing an offline edit of 24p material
using an NTSC editing timebase or for doing an online edit of 24p material that has
been offlined on an NTSC system. See
Using Final Cut Pro as a 24p Offline Editor
for
more information.
Removing 2:3:3:2 or 2:3:2:3 pull-down:
Use if you are capturing your source clips from a
digital video camcorder that applied 2:3:3:2 or 2:3:2:3 pull-down to 24p video. This
feature cleanly eliminates the redundant frame fields created by the pull-down, without
any recompression, so you can edit at 23.98 fps or 24 fps. See
Working with 2:3:3:2
Pull-Down
for more information.
Adding pull-down:
Use to output 23.98 fps video in a format that you can play on an
NTSC device, such as an NTSC monitor, and to record it as 29.97 fps video. This feature
lets you output 23.98 fps video via FireWire at the NTSC standard of 29.97 fps video.
See
Pull-Down Patterns You Can Apply to 23.98 fps Video
for more information.
Creating an audio EDL when using dual system sound:
Use if you intend to recapture the
audio elsewhere for final processing. See
Using Audio EDLs for Dual System Sound
for
more information.
Using Final Cut Pro as a 24p Online Editor
An important consideration when using Final Cut Pro as your online editor is how to
import the offline edit information. When using a separate system as the offline editor,
there are three methods you can use to get edit information from the offline system
(presented in order of preference):
Copy the project:
Can be used when a separate Final Cut Pro system is the offline system
and you used a 24 fps editing timebase for the offline edit.
212
Chapter 13
Working with 24p Video and 24 fps EDLs