Direct trimming in iMovie 6

Since updating iMovie 6 to 6.0.3 I can no longer direct trim my clips or photos. I am on OS 10.4.9

Paycheck,
You don't have Show Clip Audio Levels checked in the View menu, do you?
Matt

Similar Messages

  • Direct trimming in iMovie

    I am trying to trim my clips in the timeline. The help menu calls it "Direct Trimming", and says to position the pointer over the end of the clip that I want to trim, click on it, and drag it to the point you want it. All that happens is that I can move the clip, but it does not allow me to trim it. I can still crop the clip, but it will not allow me to direct trim.
    Mac mini   Mac OS X (10.4.3)  

    Welcome to the forum, Jeff.
    The direct trimming feature is sneaky. Direct trimming is not available when the menu item View > Show Clip Volume Levels is checked. Essentially, iMovie lets us use the mouse to edit volume levels OR do direct trimming, but not both at the same time.
    So uncheck that menu item, and the direct trimming function should start working.
    Karl

  • Where do direct trimming clips go once published?

    I just completed a project and published it to my computer in MPEG-4. I would like to send the video as an attachment by email to a friend, but I have a fear. When direct trimming, the clips don't actually disapear - they just 'fold' under the content that you want. If my recipient imports the video into their own copy of iMovie, will they be able to find the clips that are 'hidden'?

    The way iMovie works...
    The Event file holds the video clips that you imported.
    The Project file is simply a text file consisting of instructions. For example, it might say "Take frames 15 through 200 of clip 1. Add a title saying "xxx" at frame 35 and go for half a second. Add a music track from iTunes and play it at this volume. Use a transition between clips 2 and 3. etc."
    When you Share the movie, all these instructions are executed and a playable file is created.
    So that is a long way of saying, I agree with Kirk.

  • Direct Trimming, why can't I do It?

    I've been tinkering with a slide show. To trim my clips to best match the accompanying music I wanted to try the direct trimming method. My cursor does not change to the bar and arrow that I've read about in tutorials and other postings. The clips are unrendered. If that has anything to do with it. I'm using IM 5.
    The solution must be something mindlessly simple. Thanks in advance.

    Hi Rick,
    Be sure that under the View menu you have not got a checkmark next to Show Clip Volume Levels as you can't directly trim clips if this is checked. Perhaps this is the problem.
    Barbara

  • Cameras which support direct import to imovie (ipad2) through camera connection kit

    Hi
    I am looking to create a list of consumer (and prosumer) cameras which can directly connect to ipad2 via CCK and the video (& accompanying audio) shot by these cameras directly import in imovie without any conversion etc. for subsequent editing.
    So far I have see some posts mentioning Flip Mino HD being able to do this.
    Would also appreciate if the camera's resolution, rough price and other details are also posted for comparision sake.
    Thanks in advance!

    Panasonic Lumix TZ7 also seems to work as per post by floridadaz. Also saw a youtube video mentioning the same (Cannes Harbor Stroll by dkiechle)

  • Which digital camera makes videos that can be directly imported to iMove 5

    I currently own a Sony Cibershot P8 and when I shoot videos on it they are Muxed. I don't know a whole lot about that except I think it means multi-layerd. The issue I have is that I have to tweak my videos in another program before I can hear the audio in iMovie.
    Now that I'm in the market for a new camera I was wondering if there were any out there which produced videos in a format that could be edited directly in iMovie without being modified beforehand. Does anyone have any suggestions? My target is in the $300 price range with a max of $400.
    Thanks,
    UOduck23
    iBook G4   Mac OS X (10.4.5)   5G Black iPod Video

    Sorry - my mistake, I did not notice that you were talking about a still-camera. I believe some cameras may record video in MPEG4 format, which would be compatible. Do a Google search (as I just have - there are several options).
    Others may want to comment further on your requirements.

  • Trimming clips iMovie '11 9.0.4

    Hello all - I have worked in iMovie HD 5.0.2 for many years and I am now adjusting to using iMovie '11 9.0.4.
    Basic question:
    - iMovie HD 5.0.2 allowed easy trimming via "Split video clip at playhead." Then you simply Cut and out goes the bad shots. What is the equivelent for doing a simple trim like this in iMovie '11 9.0.4 ?
    Thank you kindly.

    pacobell73 wrote:
    ... - iMovie HD 5.0.2 allowed easy trimming via "Split video clip at playhead." Then you simply Cut and out goes the bad shots. What is the equivelent for doing a simple trim like this in iMovie '11 9.0.4 ?
    cmd-B (as in Blade)

  • Will the Canon Vixia HF M40 Allow Me To Directly Import to iMovie?

    I've been reading lots of conflicting things online as to whether or not I can import video directly to iMovie with the Canon Vixia HF M40.  I don't want to have to do all the conversion stuff...I just want something easy.  I found this clip on YouTube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ky9Pac_-sHY (I know it's a different Canon model) that makes uploading look really easy.  He also says in the video that all Canon camcorders work like this with iMovie.  Can this be true?
    Other info:  I have a MacBook Pro that I bought in 2010 and I have iMovie 09.  I don't mind upgrading to iMovie 11 if I have to.
    Thanks!

    Did you figure it out?
    I just ordered the HFM40 (they have a manufacturer rebate on the M4XXX maeras rightnow $250.00-$300) I'm thinking returning it and getting the M41 but anyway; Did you get it to work? 
    I found this thread:
    https://discussions.apple.com/message/15398886#15398886
    which points to this Apple article:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/TS3634
    Im running Lion and iMovie 11.
    thanks

  • IFrame import DIRECTLY into iMovie 11

    How do I import iFrame video DIRECTLY into iMovie 11?  I recently upgraded from iMovie 09 to iMovie 11.  Also, I bought a new camera (Canon) and it has
    iFrame.  I recorded a test video in the iFrame mode.  I opened iMovie.  If there is a way to get iMovie to grab the video directly from the camera, I cannot find it.  Previously I used a Panasonic Lumix.  iMovie 09 would grab the AVCHD directly from the camera. I found a workaround to get the iFrame directly into iMovie, but it entails an extra step.  (the iFrame video showed up in Iphoto 11 along with the stills.  I then moved it from IPhoto to imovie via the desktop.)
    Surely there is a way for iMovie 11 to grab the video directly from the camera, and I am missing it.  I am running Mt. Lion.   Please help.  Thank you.

    I drag the movie from iPhoto to the desktop.  Then, in iMovie, I use the "file" dropdown menu.  From that menu, I select "Import" and then I select "Movie" and then I select the movie that I have just dragged to the desktop.  It would be easier if I could drag the desktop movie directly into my iMovie, but it will not drag.

  • New to Mac iMovie HD Question?

    I just purchased an imac G5 (coming from a PC) specifically to work with home movies & pictures of the family. That's what I did the most on a PC and it looked like the offering for Mac was much friendlier.
    When I used the PC, I used either Windows Movie Maker or Adobe Premeire, one for a quick movie and the other for a more complex edit job. In either case, you would capture the hour DV and ,in some cases it would make clips, but it always allowed you to view the clip outside of the timeline and set key frames prior to inserting into the timelime. Does iMovie have this setting?
    It looks like iMovie captures the footage as clips, then you can drag the clips into the timeline, then if you want to shorten the clip you can drag the mouse to shorten each clip. Seems for my home videos lots of editing is needed as the clips are usaully not exactly what I want. What I have usally done in the past is make a 4-5 minute video highlighting the 1-hr DV, then also attach the 1 hr raw footage to a DVD. Having to squeeze each clip to make it 4-5 minutes seems difficult. Maybe Final Cut Express is in order? or can iMovie HD do this?
    Sorry for the long post and thanks for the help.
    Travis
    Imac G5   Mac OS X (10.4.3)  

    Hi Travis - welcome to the forum!
    Unfortunately I'm not familiar with the PC editing apps, but iMovie does not have the key-frame feature you refer to.
    iMovie has more than one way to edit clips - either direct trimming (which you describe), or cropping, splitting etc using the play-head.
    By changing Preferences you can import direct to the Timeline, or into the Clips Pane, and import as discrete clips, or without breaks.
    For your purpose, I would import to the Clips Pane, then Option-Drag them to the Timeline or Clips Viewer. This will leave a duplicate set in the Clips Pane.
    Now 'slash and burn' the clips on the timeline as much as you need to make your highlight mini-movie, add title etc, THEN drag the whole un-modified set of clips onto the timeline. You now have two movies in one. That can be made into a DVD as is.
    If you want them SEPARATE, you could cut and paste the highlight movie to a new project.
    Hope that helps.

  • Stutter in iMovie 5 & 6 - causes and workarounds

    This topic discusses the problem of stutter in the playback of iMovie 5/6 projects — where the playback pauses repeatedly. The cause of the stutter is discussed here, with possible workarounds.
    Over the last several weeks I've examined several stuttering projects, one provided by Marilyn Hudson and three by Benny Alford. Thanks to you both. They were very helpful.
    I also examined several projects I created myself, after discovering how to force a project to stutter.
    The tests I ran suggest that stutter is caused by the number of audio clips in the timeline of the project. When a large number of audio clips have been added to a project, the project begins to stutter. The stutter worsens as more audio clips are added, eventually causing the project to play very poorly, if it plays at all. The stutter improves as you remove audio clips, eventually allowing the project to play normally.
    Frank Farmer, whose forum topic about stutter describes the problem nicely, is a good read:
    http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=495288&tstart=0
    Benny's topic is also very helpful:
    http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=511773&tstart=100
    BEFORE WE BEGIN, A CAVAET OR TWO...
    Identifying software problems is never easy, especially when you don't have the code to read. So my conclusions may not be accurate in every respect. There may be "gaps" still to fill.
    Certain features of the stuttering problem can vary from user to user and from project to project, so what I say may not apply to everyone or to every project. Likewise, your experience may not apply to others.
    In light of that uncertainty, I hesitated a bit to even post this message, for some conclusions may be "wrong" for some users. Hopefully they will be "right" for most.
    If your experience is hugely different than mine, please say. We will all benefit.
    THE PROBLEM
    Stuttering takes several forms. It may include pauses in video playback, pauses in audio playback, audio distortion, or some combination. I believe these all have the same cause, creating a variety of playback symptoms. (The behavior may vary because of a difference in video cards and other hardware features. The amount of RAM doesn't seem to matter. I didn't have lots of Macs to test.)
    Stutter is not simply an inconvenience or nuisance. Stutter can make it impossible to edit a project. Playback becomes so poor you can't view the editing you've done.
    Severe stutter can also make simple tasks impossible to do, like moving the playhead, starting/stopping playback, selecting clips, undoing changes and saving. Your editing grinds to a halt.
    HOW THE PROJECTS WERE STUDIED
    When I began I didn't know what I was looking for, of course. I had never seen stutter in any of my projects, but had read reports by others and had some guesses. I poked and prodded the projects looking for clues, aided by software I wrote to help evaluate the type and number of project clips. I tried to explore as many possible causes as I could think of, ruling out possible causes.
    THE CAUSE
    Every project I tested could be forced to stutter by adding a large number of audio clips. Conversely, every stuttering project could be made to stop by removing audio clips. The exact number of audio clips that caused stutter varied, but not the pattern.
    Based on what I saw, the major contributing cause to stutter — perhaps the only cause — is the number of audio clips in the Timeline of the project. That will definitely cause the problem, not the length of the project, nor the project size, nor the iMovie version, nor the number of video clips.
    I was unable to find any other contributing factor. You can't prove a negative, however, so I cannot be certain other causes don't exist. As we discuss this topic more perhaps other factors will emerge.
    SEVERITY
    The severity of the stutter varies by the number of audio clips in the timeline. Stutter begins with a few simple "popping" sounds, and gets worse as more audio clips are added. The popping is replaced by pauses and audio distortion. Stutter continues to worsen as you add more audio clips, eventually making the project hard to edit.
    WHAT KIND OF AUDIO CAUSES STUTTER?
    All kinds of audio clips cause stutter. The type of audio you add doesn't seem to matter. It's the total number of audio clips that matters, not the type.
    The audio can be any of these types:
    1) Songs imported to the project from iTunes or elsewhere;
    2) Audio extracted from video clips; and
    3) Voiceover clips — narrations you record in iMovie.
    WHAT COUNTS?
    It's the number of audio CLIPS in the Timeline that matters, not the number of audio files you import or create. Importing a song adds one clip to the timeline and one file to the project. Splitting that clip adds additional clips, increasing the likelihood of stutter. Splitting extracted audio clips adds to the clip count too.
    Every audio split you do adds to the total, increasing the likelihood of stutter.
    WHAT DOES NOT AFFECT STUTTER?
    I saw no evidence that these factors contribute to stutter:
    1) The number of audio and video files (files stored in the project's Media folder).
    2) Overlapping clips in an audio track.
    3) The length of audio clips.
    4) Which audio track the audio clips reside on.
    5) The number of video clips.
    6) The length of the project.
    7) The size of the project (file size).
    8) The size of the iMovie Trash.
    HOW MANY AUDIO CLIPS WILL CAUSE STUTTER?
    It varies a bit, so it's hard to say exactly. Projects I tested from one user began stuttering at 60 audio clips. Others began at 125. The number seems to vary from Mac to Mac. My guess is a typical maximum is 90-100 audio clips, but that's just a guess.
    Although the number of clips may vary from user to user, my guess is the number may be relatively constant for all your projects. Your projects might tend to start stuttering at about 60 clips, 90 clips, 125 clips or whatever. But that's just a guess.
    One of the reasons a precise number of clips is difficult to say is that the stutter itself varies from occasional popping to long pauses, affected by the number of audio clips. It's sometimes hard to know exactly when stuttering begins. As you remove audio clips from a stuttering project, for example, the stutter may appear to go away, but you may later hear occasional popping. Then when you remove five more audio clips you achieve perfect playback.
    COUNTING AUDIO CLIPS
    Note that iMovie 5 and 6 lets us count the number of audio clips in the Timeline. When you select clips with the mouse, iMovie displays the number of selected clips at the bottom of the iMovie window.
    Unfortunately, the clip count is not displayed when the "Select All" menu command is used to select clips. You must physically drag across the audio clips to see the total.
    HOW CAN I FIGURE OUT THE CLIP LIMIT FOR MY STUTTERING PROJECT?
    It's not hard to figure out how many audio clips your Timeline can hold without stuttering. You can do a simple test where you remove audio clips until the stutter stops.
    First Save the project. (Do NOT Save the project again during the test.) Then select ten audio clips or so, and hit the Delete key. Check for stutter. If the project stutters, remove more clips. Continue removing audio clips until the stutter stops, then count the remaining audio clips. To count the remaining clips, select all the audio clips with the mouse and check the total reported at the bottom of the iMovie window. Subtract a few — just to be safe — and that's your clip limit. (If you hear occasional popping sounds later, subtract another five clips.)
    To restore the project to its previous state, choose File > Revert to Saved.
    IS THIS JUST AN iMOVIE 6 PROBLEM? OR JUST AN iMOVIE 5 PROBLEM? OR WHAT?
    Stuttering occurs in both iMovie 5 and iMovie 6. I saw the same stutter in both.
    There were indications that stutter begins earlier in iMovie 6 — with 10% to 20% fewer audio clips. That may explain why some users report that stuttering began when they upgraded to iMovie 6. iMovie 5's tolerance for audio clips seems a bit higher, so projects that play okay in iMovie 5 might begin stuttering when upgraded to iMovie 6. They may have been "on the edge" in iMovie 5, but when upgrading to iMovie 6, they start stuttering.
    Stuttering also occurs in iMovie 3 and 4. I could create stuttering projects in iMovie 3/4 too.
    The only version of iMovie that refused to stutter was iMovie 2. (I stopped the test after adding 400 audio clips.) Note that iMovie 2 may use very different QuickTime routines than later versions of iMovie, which may explain its reluctance to stutter.
    SO, WHERE'S THE PROBLEM?
    In spite of what I just said about iMovie versions, I suspect this is not an iMovie problem. The problem may lie elsewhere. Here's why:
    1. It's possible to create stuttering movies in QuickTime Player too, completely independent of iMovie. I used QuickTime Pro to add audio tracks to a movie, and found that a normal QuickTime movie can be made to stutter. It behaves just like iMovie. (QuickTime Pro's "Add" command lets you add multiple audio tracks to a movie. Each audio track is equivalent to an audio clip in iMovie.)
    2. QuickTime Player also stutters when it plays the small QuickTime reference movie iMovie places inside the iMovie project. (iMovie 2 has no such movie, suggesting its reliance on QuickTime is different.)
    The existence of stutter in both QuickTime Player and iMovie suggests the problem is in the QuickTime software itself, not iMovie. iMovie and QuickTime Player both use QuickTime system routines to edit/play our movies. I suspect that's where the problem lies. (I mean the QuickTime system software underlying both the QuickTime Player and iMovie, not the QuickTime Player application.)
    CAN I EXPORT PROJECTS STUTTERING PROJECTS TO THE CAMERA?
    No, a stuttering projects cannot be successfully exported to the camera. The copy on the tape will stutter too. If iMovie can't play the project smoothly, it can't export smoothly to the camera.
    CAN I EXPORT STUTTERING PROJECTS TO QUICKTIME?
    The stutter does NOT affect exporting to a QuickTime movie. That export succeeds, I suspect, because the export to QuickTime is not a time-sensitive operation, unlike the export to the camera. The QuickTime export can take as long as required.
    The ability to export successfully to QuickTime lets us use some of the workarounds described below.
    CAN I BURN A DVD OF A STUTTERING PROJECT?
    Yes, you can successfully burn a DVD of a stuttering project. The iDVD encoding acts a lot like exporting to QuickTime, apparently. iDVD takes whatever time it needs to encode the project; it's not a time-sensitive operation.
    CAN STUTTERING PROJECTS BE REPAIRED?
    Projects cannot be repaired so they will never stutter. The only permanent fix is for Apple to fix QuickTime, if that's where the problem lies.
    Workarounds can remove the stutter, however, allowing you edit the project successfully.
    IS THERE AN EASY WORKAROUND?
    The workaround ADJUST PLAYBACK SETTINGS below is pretty easy to implement. Trouble is, it doesn't always work, and the improvement may only be temporary. But the workaround is easy to do, so it's worth a try.
    This workaround adjusts your iMovie playback settings and Mac monitor settings to make it easier to play the movie. That reduces the playback burden on your Mac and may raise the number of audio clips the project can contain before stutter begins.
    This workaround may also make it easier to edit your project, making it easier to apply OTHER workarounds. So it's a good first step before implementing (better) workarounds.
    ARE THERE OTHER WORKAROUNDS?
    Yes, there are several effective workarounds. They all eliminate the stutter in the iMovie project.
    The workaround to choose depends on the amount of editing yet to do, and whether or not you want to preserve all the clips in the project as discrete clips. And, of course, the workaround must be convenient for you. Some require more "expertise" than others.
    It goes without saying that the simplest workaround is to try to limit the number of audio clips you include in the Timeline. That's not an ideal solution for all projects, obviously, but when you can do it, that's the best solution.
    The other workarounds are posted below, one workaround in each message. As you try them, please reply to that message when suggesting changes and reporting errors. Future readers should check for updated versions of workarounds posted later in this topic.
    GENERAL OBSERVATIONS
    • The type of stutter we see varies quite a lot. One project I tested, the large project authored by Marilyn, showed considerable VIDEO stutter when played on her iMac. The audio played fine. There was so much stutter the project could not be edited. When I moved Marilyn's project to my PowerBook 1.5 GHz G4, worse video stuttering occurred.
    But when played on my desktop Mac (Dual 1 GHz PPC G4) the VIDEO played just fine but the AUDIO stuttered. The audio slowed down, as if playing in slow motion. A clip's audio could sometimes be heard well after the playhead moved beyond the end of the audio clip.
    • It's easy to create a stuttering project. Here's how: Create a new project, record a few seconds of audio voiceover, Copy the voiceover clip and Paste it at the end of the project 9 times. (To move the playhead to the end before you Paste each time, press the End key on your keyboard.) Then select all 10 audio clips, Copy them, and Paste at the end of the project 9 times. The project now has 100 audio clips. Try playing the project. If it fails to stutter, Paste again at the end of the project. Repeat Pasting at the end until the stutter begins. Stutter will get progressively worse the more clips you Paste.
    • I saw some strange window behavior when editing badly stuttering projects. The iMovie window began behaving strangely. Activating windows in OTHER applications windows stopped working normally. Clicking in the window of another application would activate the window — allow me type in it, for example — but the iMovie window refused to allow it to come forward. The iMovie window remained on top, although its three red, orange and green window titlebar buttons were disabled. It was as if the iMovie window had changed into a palette that refused to go to the background. Re-launching iMovie resolved the problem.
    WHAT ABOUT iTUNES MUSIC?
    There are reliable reports that (some types of?) iTunes music may affect stutter. Unfortunately, I wasn't able to reproduce that problem, no matter what music I tried. I can't suggest what type music to use — or avoid.
    There is a workaround that has worked successfully for some. That is to use iTunes to burn an Audio CD of the songs you want to use, then import the songs directly to iMovie from the Audio CD. See the workaround "BURN SONGS TO AUDIO CD" below.
    THIS IS GETTING LONG
    There's more I could say, but it won't add much value. We'll learn more as we gain more experience, I'm sure.
    Good luck with your projects. Let's hope the underlying problem, whatever it is, is fixed soon. In the meantime, share your insights and discoveries.
    Karl

    WORKAROUND 3: Divide and Conquer.
    BEST SUITED FOR
    This method is best suited for projects where you still have quite a lot of editing to do, and the project is stuttering badly.
    This is my favorite workaround, for it allows you to continue to edit the clips normally as discrete clips, but in a stutter-free environment.
    SUMMARY
    To reduce the number of audio clips in the project, this workaround divides your project into two smaller projects. Each project — each Part — contains a smaller number of audio clips so it plays smoothly. You can edit the clips normally, for the project plays smoothly.
    Later, when you have finished editing the Parts, you re-assemble the Parts back into a single project. The method of reassembly we use will not cause stutter in that project.
    As you add more audio clips to each Part, you may see a Part begin to stutter again, just like the original. You've hit your audio clip limit again. It's not a big deal. You simply divide that Part in half again to reduce the number of audio clips, and the new, even smaller Parts will play smoothly.
    Usually it's necessary to divide a stuttering project just one time, but more may be needed.
    ADVANTAGES
    Each Part of the divided project contains half the clips of the original project. The clips are preserved as discrete clips, which allows you to edit clips normally. (Other methods join the video clips, audio clips, titles, and transitions into a single clip so they are no longer editable as discrete clips.)
    DISADVANTAGES:
    1) Because the project has been divided into two (or more) Parts, it's not possible to play your project from start to finish.That's not a big problem, but it's not what I would prefer. (If playing everything is important to you, see the MODIFIED DIVIDE AND CONQUER paragraph below.)
    Of course, you'll be able to play all the Parts together when you re-join the Parts later.
    2) This workaround can require significant amounts of disk space, especially if the clips imported from the camera are long-running clips. (An hour-long lecture, for example, with no scene breaks.)
    If the clips are small, dividing a 10GB project in half will use an additional 10GB disk space (the total for the two Parts). As you split the Parts, it will temporarily use more.
    If the clips in the original project were long-running clips, each Part may require the same disk space as the original project. If the original project was 10GB, each Part may use 10GB. This is because of iMovie's non-destructive editing feature, which copies the long Media file for the long clip in the original project to each Part.
    Later, when joining the two Parts into one project, allow 13GB for each hour of total run time.
    3) If the project contains many clips, it may be difficult to divide the project's video and audio tracks accurately. iMovie bugs may make it difficult to correctly select and delete clips. Care must be taken when selecting and removing clips. More details below.
    TO DIVIDE THE PROJECT, FOLLOW THESE STEPS
    • Open the stuttering project.
    • If you haven't done it yet, adjust your Mac and iMovie settings as described in WORKAROUND 1: Adjust Playback Settings. This may make it easier for you to divide the stuttering project. (Return your settings to normal after dividing the project.)
    • In iMovie preferences > General, turn ON the checkboxes "Snap to items in Timeline" and "Play sound effects when snapping." We will create bookmarks in a moment, and this makes them easier to use.
    • From the iMovie menubar, choose View > Switch To Timeline Viewer. (Ignore if the Timeline already uses that view.)
    • Locate a good place to divide the project in half. In a moment, you will move the playhead to that place and create a bookmark. Later, you will divide the project there.
    (If the project already has many bookmarks, consider removing all the bookmarks to make it easier to find your new bookmark. Use the iMovie menu command Markers > Delete All Bookmarks.)
    • If your audio clips are heavily grouped in one area of the project, split the project in the middle of that area, not the middle of the project. You goal is to divide the number of audio clips roughly in half.
    • Look for a location like this, which is ideal:
    - At the start (or end) of a video clip.
    - Where that end of the video clip has no audio clip below it.
    If you can't find a clip end that has no audio clip below it, move the playhead to the start/end of a video clip, select the audio clip below it, and split that audio clip.
    If the video clip is so long you must split it, split the video clip where there is no audio clip directly below it.
    • Place the playhead where you want to divide the project, precisely at the start (or end) of a video clip. Create your bookmark.
    • Write down the location (the playhead position) of the bookmark you created. If you've moved the playhead away from the bookmark, first re-locate the playhead exactly over the bookmark. Use the menu command Markers > Next Bookmark (or Previous Bookmark) to go there.
    The playhead position is displayed just under iMovie's video Monitor. The time shown will be something like "33:52:10". Write it down.
    • Save the project. Quit iMovie.
    • In the Finder, click on the project and choose File > Duplicate. The Finder will require several minutes to duplicate the project. The Finder will name it "<Project Name> copy.iMovieProject", where <Project Name> is the original name of your project.
    • When the Finder is done duplicating it, rename the duplicate project "Part 1 <Project Name>.iMovieProject". (We'll refer to this part now as "Part 1".)
    • Open Part 1 in iMovie.
    • In a moment, you will remove all the video and audio clips AFTER the bookmark, leaving the video clips and audio clips BEFORE the bookmark intact. They will comprise Part 1. iMovie sometimes makes it hard to select the clips you want to remove, so go slowly and carefully here.
    • Read this paragraph and the three after it before you continue. Starting at the end of the project and moving towards the bookmark, select groups of audio clips in the bottom Timeline track and delete them. (Select the clips, then hit the Delete key.) After removing a group of audio clips from the bottom track, remove (any) audio clips above them in the middle track, then remove the video clips above those. Removing the video clips makes the timeline shorter, easier to work with.
    • As you approach the bookmark, be careful. When you select an audio clip that's located close to the bookmark, iMovie sometimes (inappropriately) selects an audio clip or two BEFORE the bookmark, even though you don't drag over it. (I suspect those are audio clips where Direct Trimming has been used, and iMovie gets a bit confused.) It's important you not remove any selected audio clip located before the bookmark. You must unselect those before hitting the Delete key. To do that, hold down the Command key — the Apple key — and click on any selected clip located before the bookmark. Make sure only the audio clips you want to delete are selected, THEN hit the Delete key.
    • If you mess up, don't worry. Use iMovie's Undo command. Or to undo all your changes, choose File > Revert to Saved, which reverts Part 1 back to when you opened it.
    • Sometimes iMovie fails to delete all the video clips you've selected. (Another bug.) As you approach the bookmark, zoom in on the Timeline to view the bookmark area more closely. After pressing the Delete key to delete the video clips you've selected just beyond the bookmark, make sure all the video and audio clips after the bookmark were removed. If not, press the Delete key again.
    • How go back and do what you just read.
    • When all the audio and video clips after the bookmark have been deleted, save Part 1.
    • Play Part 1. If it doesn't play smoothly, it still contains too many audio clips. That's unusual, but it happens. Later, you will have to divide it again, but don't worry about that now. You can divide it again after finishing Part 2.
    • To discard the clips no longer needed in Part 1, empty the iMovie trash. Emptying the trash will save the project again, automatically. (It may be necessary to also empty the Finder trash to recover the disk space.)
    • We now move on to Part 2. It's a bit different, so don't skip reading these instructions.
    • Quit iMovie, closing Part 1.
    • Duplicate the original project again. Name this copy "Part 2 <Project Name>.iMovieProject".
    • Open Part 2 in iMovie.
    • IMPORTANT: For Part 2, it's crucial that you lock the audio at the second half of the project before removing video clips in the first half, which you are about to do. Locking prevents the audio from sliding over when you remove the video clips in the front half, losing sync with the video.
    To lock the clips , move the playhead to the start of the first audio clip you'll keep, then select all the audio clips and choose Advanced > Lock Audio Clip at Playhead.
    • Starting at the bookmark and moving back towards the start of the project, select audio clips in the BOTTOM audio track and delete them.
    • Repeat for the audio clips in the TOP audio track (the middle timeline track.)
    • You are about to remove the video clips before the bookmark. There's a couple of things you need to know first.
    1) Removing the video clips will dislodge the bookmark. Ignore its new position. The bookmark will no longer be located next to the dividing clip. That's okay. You won't be using the bookmark again.
    2) iMovie may not actually remove all the selected video clips when you hit the Delete key. A few video clips may remain, still selected, at the (new) beginning of the project. Do not click the mouse for clicking it will unselect those clips. Before clicking the mouse, use the zoom slider below the timeline to zoom in on the (new) start of the project. If you see selected clips there, hit the Delete key AGAIN to remove them.
    • If you don't understand what you just read, read it again. Then select all the video clips before the bookmark and delete them. Zoom in to check for any selected clips that were not deleted, and press the Delete key again, if necessary.
    • Save Part 2 and empty the iMovie trash.
    • If everything worked as it should, the Part 2 audio and video should still be in sync and the project should play smoothly. If it doesn't play smoothly, Part 2 still contains too many audio clips. You'll have to divide Part 2 again later.
    • If either Part 1 or Part 2 needs to be divided again, use the same technique we just used, but instead of duplicating and dividing the original project, duplicate and divide Part 1 or Part 2. First read WHAT IF THE PARTS BEGIN STUTTERING LATER? just below for a naming suggestion.
    WHAT IF A PART BEGINS TO STUTTER LATER?
    As you add add more new audio clips to Part 1 or Part 2, these projects may eventually start to stutter, just like the original project did. That's okay, for now you know how to eliminate stutter by dividing the project. When dividing Part 1 or Part 2 use new names like "Part 1A" and "Part 1B", or the names that work for you.
    HOW TO RE-JOIN THE COMPLETED PARTS
    When you are done editing all the Parts, you will likely want to join the Parts back together in a single project that you send to iDVD, export to QuickTime, or export to the camera. (See below when exporting to the camera.)
    Don't worry, the method we use to join the Parts won't increase the number of audio clips, so the joined project won't stutter.
    FOLLOW THESE STEPS TO RE-JOIN THE PARTS
    1. Create a new iMovie project. Name it "Joined <Project Name>.iMovieProject" or something. Save the project.
    2. One by one, locate the movie "Timeline Movie.mov" that's inside each of your Part projects and drag that movie into the Joined project timeline. (Dropping the movie on the Timeline imports Part 1 to the Joined project.) First import Part 1, then Part 2, etcetera.
    To locate the Timeline Movie inside the Part project you must first open the project package to see what's inside. In the Finder, Control-click on the project icon and choose "Show Package Contents" from the popUp menu. A Finder window will open, showing the contents of the project package.
    Double-click on the Cache folder. Inside you'll find the QuickTime movie "Timeline Movie.mov". (It's a special kind of QuickTime movie, called a reference movie, that has no audio or video of its own, just pointers to files in the project's Media folder.)
    Drag the Timeline Movie.mov into the Joined project timeline. That will import the audio and video of that Part as a single clip to the Joined movie. Because all the audio clips are "flattened" as part of one video clip, the Joined project has no audio clips, only one video clip for each Part. So the Joined project won't stutter.
    When all the Parts have been imported, add your Chapter Markers for iDVD to the project, if desired, and send the project to iDVD.
    EXPORTING TO THE CAMERA
    When exporting the divided project to the camera you may prefer to export the individual Parts projects instead of the Joined project. The reason is that the Parts projects contain discrete clips, just like the original project, while the joined project contains only a few clips, one for each Part.
    When exporting a project to the camera iMovie preserves the clips as clips. Later, if you re-import that tape back to a new iMovie project, iMovie returns the exported clips as clips.
    If you want your tape to contain all the clips of all the Parts, export the Parts to the camera, not the Joined project. The clips will return as discrete clips when the tape is re-imported. Clips like titles and transitions will no longer be editable, but they will return as discrete clips.
    (Some clips in the Parts don't return as discrete clips. Any adjacent clips iMovie has edited are merged into one clip when exported to the camera. So two adjoining title clips will return as a single clip.)
    MODIFIED DIVIDE AND CONQUER
    If you want to able to play Part 1 as you edit Part 2 — instead of playing one Part at a time — you can modify the Divide and Conquer method to include Part 1 in your Part 2 project. This requires more disk space, but that may not matter.
    When you done editing Part 1 and are ready to start editing Part 2, drag the Timeline Movie.mov from Part 1 to the beginning of the timeline in Part 2 (after locking the audio clips in Part 2). That delivers all of Part 1 as a single clip in Part 2. That lets you play Part 1 as you edit Part 2. (When joining the Parts, skip importing Part 1 to the Joined project. It will arrive with Part 2.)
    FINALLY
    This is the most complicated workaround, but for some projects, arguably the best. If I've missed something, please say so we can avoid problems.
    Karl

  • Need help adding music to Imovie.

    I've been working on a slide show in Imovie and importing music I've purchased at Itunes. I find some of the songs need to be shortened to work with the amount of pictures I have. What I did was purchase a song at Itunes, burned this song to a CD, then saved it back to my hard disk to work on it in Jasmine- an audio editing program. I was told this was the way to do it in the Itunes discussion group. When I save it out of Jasmine after shortening it, I saved it as an AIFF file. I then tried to bring it into Imovie, but the program doesn't seem to allow me to do it. Am I going about this all wrong? Is the a simpler way to do this?
    Dick Skover

    Hi!
    Jasmine- an audio editing program. I was told this was the way to do it in the Itunes discussion group.
    I am sure that everyone in the itunes discussion group gives very good advice. However, have you tried simply importing the burned song to imovie and
    i then
    editing it by splitting and deleting or by direct trimming?
    Sue

  • UTILIZING iMovie's non-destructive feature

    K, I've seen dozons of post regarding the dislikes and work arounds for iMovie's non-destructive default functionality. However, the true purpose of this feature im yet to take advantage of, and would like to do so if possible.
    New to iMovie, just started using it last month. Dig it. I've popped in some sound trax and am now editing the timing of the clips to the music. What Im finding is that I'm left with small gaps of dead space in the timeline pane where I'd like to 'extend' or add the rest of the clip to soak up that .24 sec. (or whatever) between the two clips. Can the non-destructive element 'add' in this missing time from the native clip?
    Timing would'nt have been much of an issue if I didn't have to delete transitions constantly to splice in clips n' pic's, which consequently shifted the timing a bit. Now that the montage is done, and the clips are timed to the music, I gotta fix them gaps!
    Any help, much appreciated. Thanks all.

    pixel punk, the non-destructive editing feature of iMovie isn't really intended to help you 'add' stuff to fill gaps. But it DOES let you re-lengthen a clip that's been shortened. That may be all you need.
    Basically, it lets you restore a clip to it's original length (or something less) if you've shortened a clip. So if you change your mind after shortening a clip — even after emptying the iMovie Trash — you can restore the clip to (up to) its original length.
    That means that Yes, if you have shortened a clip on either side of a gap you can use Direct Trimming to lengthen the clip to fill the gap. The non-destructive editing feature guarantees that the "stuff" removed from the clip is still there in the clip. You can re-lengthen the clip to get it back.
    If the clip hasn't been shortened, then you must fill the gap some other way. If the gap is small, one way is to fill it with a picture of the last frame seen before the gap. Don't use iMovie's Create Still Frame command to fill the gap for the image quality is poor. Rather, use the Save Frame command, save the frame as a PICT, then re-import the PICT back into the project. Use Direct Trimming, if necessary, to shorten the PICT clip to fill the gap.
    The gap will look good. If the view notices anything, he will assume the videographer simply paused.
    Karl

  • Trimming ringtone

    i own n73me i'm not able to trim ringtone. ev-er-y-time i tried to save after trimming, the msg displayed is"trim length is too short or not yet defined. please define it now"

    Uncheck the menu item View > Show Clip Volume Levels. Now direct trimming should work.
    iMovie doesn't let us edit both the volume level and the clip length at the same time.
    Karl

  • Trimming

    Hi
    In iMovie HD 5, when I select a clip for Direct Trimming in the timeline viewer, and position the pointer over the end of the clip, it does not change shape to allow me to drag the clip back to the point that I want it.
    Do I have to turn this option on somewhere ?

    My question has been answered by Rich839 in the iMovie HD section.
    You need to deselect (uncheck) Show Clip Volume Levels in the view menu.
    Thanks Rich

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