![]() ![]() After looking at a $19.95 tutorial on Udemy, I properly slapped myself for thinking about it and redirected my browser back to good ol’. I needed to learn it, and I had no time to waste. From what it seemed, all I had to lose was time. After reading the opinions of some “old head” editors making the switch and “never looking back” I decided to give it a shot. As projects grow larger and larger the NLEE (NLE effect) kicks in and what you really need is a monocle.Įnter Final Cut Pro X. Every darn thing you do on the timeline seemed to take forever. For the past couple of years, I’ve been editing on resolve and while I appreciate the powerful tools, I felt like my editing was being held back. ![]() That course is more of a guided tutorial whereas this course is a really good reference course.Ībsolutely the most useful and powerful tutorial I’ve done with Ripple.or anyone for that matter. If you are new to editing and you don’t already have established processes around it, I would recommend you rather go for the Final Cut Pro Core Training course with Steve Martin. I love that about this course, but then I talk fast myself. The course moves fast, and Mark Spencer talks fast. #NEAT VIDEO FOR FINAL CUT PRO X 10.3 HOW TO#I think this course works really well for people who have been editing for a while and are trying to figure out how to use FCP, or are getting back into editing with FCP in the latest versions (I had been doing very little editing over the last 5 years and was rusty). The Warp Speed Editing command set also adds some very useful shortcuts. I continually reference the Keyboard Command Cheat Sheet. The project media for this course is also very useful. This course does a brilliant job of showing you all the technical features of FCP that make it such an incredibly efficient editor and it exposes you to a ton of hidden features. Final Cut Pro X was a big change and I started editing with it as soon as it came out, but I’m a hobbyist, not a professional. I still have the G4 Cube with Final Cut 2.0 and it still works!. ![]() I have been editing with Final Cut for more than 20 years.
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