In this video, we'll review the options available for you on your timeline (sequence) while editing. Some of these are essential for working directly on the timeline
Video Transcription
This is Margaret with Noble Desktop. This is a lesson on timeline display settings. It's under your wrench. I recommend having all of these checked. We'll look at these one by one.
The first one says show source clip name and label this particular camera one. I want everything that has to do with camera one to be labeled a different color, so I'm going to make that magenta.
Now the name is in, this is your source clip. I could change the name, it would appear here. But now you can see that I'm able to see what's camera one on my timeline because I have this checked. If I uncheck it, that label disappears.
Often you do want to keep your labels. Let's look at the next one, show video thumbnails. So what is a video thumbnail? That if I were to expand this, you could double-click right here. I don't see any video thumbnails, let's go back and check that again. It gives you a little view of your image on your timeline. If you were to keep this large, you could double-click right here in this empty spot to keep it one degree larger.
Show video keyframes, keyframes are your opacity line and it's called that because it allows you to create keyframes on it with your opacity, for example, P for the pen tool. Maybe I want to create two points to create and then maybe I wanted to dip to black here. So I'm working with the opacity line through keyframes using the pen tool, but I can only do that if I see this line and that line is there if I say video keyframes.
Show video names, that's self-explanatory. Show audio waveforms, we could look at these waveforms right now. So if I take that away, no more waveforms for me. Audio keyframes, just like video keyframes but whereas video's opacity, audio is your volume level. Say you want this to fade in very gradually like so, you can't do that if you don't have this line. Show audio keyframes available.
Show clip markers, so I'm going to say M and M again. I'm going to say color correct as a note to myself. Segmentation marker, I'm going to make this big, so there it is. If I had this off, show clip marker, I wouldn't be able to see my notes on the timeline, but you do want to see your notes on the timeline. It doesn't have to be a segmentation marker, it could just be a regular marker.
Then you have show duplicate frame markers. So this is very good if you have a long project. Command + C, Command + B. You might notice that blue line has appeared on both of these clips. That's because they're duplicates. Show duplicate frame markers and now I'm alerted to the fact that I have a duplicate clip.
Let's look at show through edits. I'm going to make a cut here and you see how now there's a little Band-Aid look. That's because I made a cut within a clip of itself. I didn't make a cut that is like so, like maybe I'm going to cut out the middle and then close the gap and then you don't you no longer see those Band-Aids. The reason I'm seeing those Band-Aids is because it's cut with the same clip has been cut and nothing has been removed. If I have that off, show through edits, I no longer have my Band-Aid.
What are the benefits of that? The benefits are knowing that you've made a cut but you can make a cut here and make one side larger and that you know that you didn't make any change, I just simply had it playing through.
So now we have show effects badges, which I do recommend keeping up your effects badges for time remapping, opacity, motion, things like this. So it's nice to have those up there.
I hope you've enjoyed this lesson on timeline display settings. This has been Margaret with Noble Desktop.