video clip joining
by ben
on
Nov 6, 2007 at 1:12:43 pm
HEy guys,
quick question.
I rendered out a bunch of clips of a conferance for a speaker. I made 38 clips, totalling 9 hours of footage.
One speaker per clip, apparently they want a bunch of them thrown together. is tehre anyway I can just batch up the clips and join them together, any ideas?
Re: video clip joining by walter biscardi on Nov 6, 2007 at 1:26:19 pm
[ben]"
One speaker per clip, apparently they want a bunch of them thrown together. is tehre anyway I can just batch up the clips and join them together, any ideas?"
Create a new timeline.
Grab all the clips you need.
Drag them into the timeline.
Lay off to tape or export as a self contained movie.
Alternatively, edit the clips into the timeline if you need to trim off the heads and tails.
Walter Biscardi, Jr.
Biscardi Creative Media HD and SD Production for Broadcast and Independent Productions.
Re: video clip joining by ben on Nov 6, 2007 at 2:10:14 pm
yeah, thats the good way to go about it, i agree.
i was kinda hoping to just join up my mp4 clips, i believe there are a few pc programs that do this.
These people are very annoying, and need it fast, and I was hoping that something like this would do the trick, and I wouldnt have to go back to the high rez footage.
Re: video clip joining by PaulD on Nov 6, 2007 at 2:59:06 pm
[ben]" was kinda hoping to just join up my mp4 clips..." Hi
Err? It always worries me when someone asks a question that the answer is so obvious ;-)
What don't I know?
Just copy and paste them one at a time into a QuickTime Pro Player window, one after the other (playhead at end of movie each time), then Save As the resultant long movie with make Self-Contained checked.
Or does doing that destroy the movie clip's playability on a Windows PC?
Re: video clip joining by mr.escandon on Nov 6, 2007 at 3:22:44 pm
Don't beat yourself up - it wasn't actually that obvious. Most final cut users don't even use Quicktime pro to its fullest capacity since they don't really need to. The Quicktime only way should work though, and it's probably the way you want to do it.
* * *
Paul Escandon
Producer | Director | Editor
Apple Certified Trainer - Final Cut Pro
Oremus Productions
www.oremusproductions.com
- -
Adjunct Professor of Media
John Paul the Great Catholic University
Re: video clip joining by PaulD on Nov 6, 2007 at 3:30:48 pm
[ben]"s for making me feel like an idiot. " Hi
Not intended, my apologies.
Macs have used cut'and'paste since 1984, and QuickTime since 1991.
Nothing is more fundamental to the Mac interface, and to working with computer-based video/audio/text/data assets - its what a Mac does ;-)
Straightforwardly, its worth spending a moment to learn about QuickTime, as its at the core of all Mac-based video editing - and knowing what it does and doesn't do is extremely helpful in understanding the newer technologies like mpeg or mxf- format files, as well as web-based distribution.