BASIC EDITING TIPS
This is a group of simple ‘rules of thumb’ for editing. These rules are guides - not iron-clad laws. Sometimes you will need to break them.
This is a group of simple ‘rules of thumb’ for editing. These rules are guides - not iron-clad laws. Sometimes you will need to break them.
KNOW
WHEN A SHOT STARTS OR STOPS - Every shot has a beginning and an end.
Once you have selected a clip to work with, look at it with a careful
eye to determine exactly where the in and out points go. For instance,
if there is a nice shot with a camera wobble, cut out before the wobble.
If the shot is a zoom in, cut after the zoom is finished. You will have
another chance to adjust the shot later.
ESTABLISH A RHYTHM - There is a way in which editing is like music. The shots don’t
need
to be the same length, but if you have a series of shots, look at the
durations. Typically you might have two that are similar and then change
up. A sequence that goes between quite long and quite short shots will
feel awkward. A very short shot could be a second, or thirty frames.
THINK
ABOUT THE SPACE that you are creating in a series of shots. Do you give
your viewers a sense of 'being somewhere.’ When you go from sequence to
sequence, place extra value on the 'transition shot' that takes you out
of a scene, or into the next one.
MATCH
CUTTING - Match cuts are the bread and butter of editing. This is the
illusion of continuous action. The classic match cut is the shot of
someone opening a door. The follow up is a shot from the other side of
the door carefully timed so that the door’s movement looks continuous.
To get a match cut right means adjustments of a single frame one way or
the other.
AVOID
EXTREMES OF FOCAL LENGTH ON CUTS - Part of the key to editing is to
establish a sense of space; this means not getting the viewer seasick.
(unless that’s the point of the scene!) Avoid going from a very long
shot (LS) to a very close one (XCU). In general, long to medium, medium
to close, etc.
Typically,
avoid a JUMP CUT, going from one shot to another almost identical one.
Experiment and you will find that this means don’t cut from a CU on
someone to another CU of the same person. Instead, cut to a medium shot
(MS) or a different angle (over 30 degrees).
DON’T
CUT FROM MOTION TO STATIC or STATIC TO MOTION - If you try to cut a PAN
before the camera has stopped, you will see the problem.
L CUT - An L -cut is one where the sound of the income shot starts before the picture, or
occasionally,
vice versa. L cuts are the beginning of a sophisticated approach to
editing. They are very good for things like introducing a new speaker in
a scene, or transitioning from one scene to another, giving a smooth
and natural flavor to the cut.
WHEN
IN DOUBT, TAKE IT OUT – Ideally, a finished film has only necessary
images in it. If you think something is superfluous, your audience will
probably agree.
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