The Smart Tool can also be used to quickly draw fades by clicking with the mouse pointer in the top left or right of the clip the pointer should change to display a square with a diagonal line and shading and dragging inwards. With Shuffle Mode engaged [F1] any clips you move will automatically position themselves next to the previous clip when moved. By moving the clip that we chopped out back next to the clip at the start we should find that we have put this edit back together.
Use the Trim tool to expand the clip to the end. Note how the clip at the end of the track moves out to make way for the expanding clip before it. Click on the clip at the end of the track that has been moved out of its original position.
This will display the Spot dialog box. You can put a clip back in its original position by using the Time Stamp. The clip will now be back into its original position. Avid Pro Tools. Spitfire Audio Aperture: The Stack review: An unusual collection of super-sized electronic instruments. These are really useful to slim down the Region List when it gets too long to be manageable, or when Pro Tools starts to slow down. Select Unused will select all the Regions that are not placed anywhere in the Edit window, including whole files which are displayed in bold type in the Region List.
Select Offline narrows the focus to Regions or parents of Regions that Pro Tools cannot locate — usually because they are on a drive that isn't connected to the system you are on. I often use this option to help narrow down these Regions, and then use the 'Show Full Path Names' option to see where Pro Tools is expecting to find them. Another Select option, 'Unused Except Whole Files', is useful because it leaves all unused original files in the Region List, while selecting unused derivative Regions that may have been created by editing and so on.
This means you can delete the latter while retaining all the original source material that was recorded for your project.
A dialogue will ask whether you want to remove or delete the selected Regions. If your selection includes entire files shown in bold type in the Region List , you'll be offered the choice of deleting them altogether, or removing them from the Session but leaving them on your drive.
If you choose the former, they will be gone forever — there is no undo! Why Not Delete? Why Not Automate Mutes? Make sure you hold the Shift key down whilst you tweak the edit points with the Selector tool, or you will instantly lose your selection! Shuffle Top Tips Now you have mastered making editing selections and using Shuffle edit to tidy your audio up, here are some power-user Shuffle-editing tips The region at the right has been locked, meaning that it and other regions further to the right will be unaffected by any Shuffle editing taking place to the left.
Now you can Shuffle-edit your section and nothing later on in the Session will move because of that one locked region. When you have finished, unlock it, tidy up the gap and you're done. Rather than changing to Shuffle mode just to butt two regions together, try this. Still in Slip make sure Tab to Transient is off , click with the Selector Tool in region one, then Tab so the cursor is now at the end of region one.
Next Control-click Windows: Start-click region two and it will snap to where the cursor is — which is the end of region one! Sometimes you need to Shuffle edit 'in reverse' — the final region is in the correct place, and you want to butt up a preceding region to its beginning.
Its tail will then snap to the head of the last region. Shuffle editing across an entire Session can be a useful way of reordering the structure of a multitrack project. Sometimes you need to make a Shuffle edit across a multitrack Session, if for instance you want to delete an entire section of a song.
This will extend that selection vertically across all the tracks.
0コメント