Chapter 7. Transitions, Themes, and Travel Maps
Cutting and ordering clips into a coherent narrative makes them infinitely more entertaining than the hours of dreck you’d otherwise have. But why stop there? This is computer video editing, after all. The next two chapters cover what you can do between your clips (this chapter) and what you can do to your clips (video effects) to make your whole project more vivid.
About Transitions
What happens when one clip ends and the next one begins? In about 99.99 percent of all movies, music videos, and commercials—and in 100 percent of camcorder movies before the Macintosh era—you get a cut. That’s the technical term for “nothing special happens at all.” One scene ends, and the next one begins.
Note
Impressively enough, iMovie requires no rendering time—no delay while the program computes the video effect you’re creating—as there is in most other video-editing programs. You see the effect instantly.
Professional film and video editors, however, have at their disposal a wide range of transitions—special effects that smooth the juncture between one clip and the next. For example, the world’s most popular transition is the crossfade or dissolve, in which the end of one clip gradually fades away as the next one fades in (see Figure 7-1). The crossfade is popular because it’s so effective. It gives the transition a feeling of softness and grace, and yet it’s so subtle that you might not notice it.
Figure 7-1. The world’s most popular and effective transition ...
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