Pinnacle Systems Studio - 15.0 Instruction Manual

Pinnacle Studio
Version 15
Including Studio, Studio Ultimate
and Studio Ultimate Collection
Your Life in Movies
Documentation by Nick Sullivan Copyright ©1996-2011 Avid Technology, Inc. All rights reserved. Please respect the Rights of Artists and Creators. Content such as music,
photos, video and celebrity images are protected by the laws of many countries. You may not use other people’s content unless you own the rights or have the permission of the owner.
This product or portions thereof are pr otected in the United States by one or more of the following United States Patents: 5,495,291; 6,469,711; 6,532,043; 6,901,211; 7,124,366; 7,165,219; 7,286,132; 7,301,092 and 7,500,176; and in Europe by one or more of the following European Patents: 0695094 and 0916136. Other patents are pending.
Mpegable DS 2.2 ©2004 Dicas Digital Image Coding GmbH. Manufactured under license from Dolby Laboratories. Dolby and the double-D symbol are trademarks of Dolby Laboratories. Confidential unpublished works. Copyright 1993 - 2005 Do lby Laboratories. All Rights Reserved. MPEG Layer-3 audio coding technology licensed from Fraunhofer IIS and Thomson Multimedia. Portions of this product were created using LEADTOOLS ©1991-2006, LEAD Technologies, Inc. All rights reserved.  Portions utilize Windows Media Technologies ©1999- 2005 Microsoft Corporation. Real Producer SDK ©1995-2005 Real Networks Inc. This product contains portions of imaging code owned and copyrighted by Pegasus Imaging Corporation, Tampa, FL. All rights reserved. MPEG Layer II Audio by QDesign Corp.  This product contains a YouTube API.
MPEG Audio technology may be included with this product. Audio MPEG, Inc. and S.I.SV.EL., S.P.A. require this notice: This product contains MPEG Audio technology licensed by Audio MPEG and SISVEL only for use in accordance with Avid’s EULA.
No part of this manual may be copied or distributed, transmitted, transcribed, stored in a retrieval system, or translated into any human or computer language, in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical, magnetic, manual, or otherwise, without the express written permission of Avid Technology, Inc.
Avid 280 North Bernardo Avenue
Mountain View, CA 94943 Printed in the USA.
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Table of contents
BEFORE YOU START .................................................. XI
Equipment requirements ........................................................................ xii
Abbreviations and conventions ............................................................. xiv
On-line help .......................................................................................... xvi
CHAPTER 1: USING STUDIO ....................................... 1
Undo, Redo, Help, Support and Premium ............................................... 2
Setting options ......................................................................................... 3
Edit mode .................................................................................................... 4
The Player ................................................................................................ 5
Playback controls ..................................................................................... 8
Further editing topics ............................................................................. 11
Expanding Studio .................................................................................. 12
Project Archive and Restore .................................................................... 15
Archiving a Studio project ..................................................................... 16
Restoring an archived project ................................................................ 19
CHAPTER 2: CAPTURING AND IMPORTING MEDIA 23
The Studio Import Wizard ..................................................................... 24
Import Wizard panels .............................................................................. 25
The Import From panel .......................................................................... 26
The Import To panel .............................................................................. 29
Table of contents iii
The Mode panel ..................................................................................... 33
The Compression Options window ....................................................... 36
The Scene Detection Options window ................................................... 37
The Filename panel ............................................................................... 38
Selecting media for import ...................................................................... 40
Import from file-based media ................................................................ 41
Import from DV or HDV camera .......................................................... 48
Import from analog sources ................................................................... 53
Import from DVD or Blu-ray Disc ........................................................ 54
Import from digital cameras .................................................................. 55
Stop motion ........................................................................................... 55
Snapshot ................................................................................................ 58
CHAPTER 3: THE ALBUM .......................................... 63
The Videos section .................................................................................... 69
Opening a video file .............................................................................. 73
Viewing video ....................................................................................... 77
Selecting scenes and files ...................................................................... 78
Displaying scene and file information ................................................... 79
Comment view ....................................................................................... 80
Combining and subdividing scenes ....................................................... 81
Redetecting scenes ................................................................................. 83
The Transitions section ............................................................................ 84
The Montage® Themes section ................................................................ 86
The Titles section ...................................................................................... 87
The Still Images section ........................................................................... 88
The Disc Menus section ............................................................................ 89
The Sound Effects section ........................................................................ 90
The Music section ..................................................................................... 91
The Project Bin ......................................................................................... 92
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CHAPTER 4: THE MOVIE WINDOW ........................... 97
Movie Window views.............................................................................. 101
Storyboard view ................................................................................... 101
Timeline view ...................................................................................... 102
Text view ............................................................................................. 108
The toolboxes .......................................................................................... 108
The Video toolbox ............................................................................... 110
The Audio toolbox ............................................................................... 112
CHAPTER 5: VIDEO CLIPS ...................................... 115
Video clip basics ..................................................................................... 116
Adding video clips to your movie ....................................................... 116
Working with multiple capture files .................................................... 117
The project video format ..................................................................... 118
Interface features ................................................................................. 121
Trimming video clips .............................................................................. 123
Trimming on the Timeline using handles ............................................ 123
Clip-trimming tips ............................................................................... 127
Trimming with the Clip properties tool ............................................... 128
Resetting trimmed clips ....................................................................... 130
Splitting and combining clips ................................................................ 131
Advanced Timeline editing .................................................................... 132
Insert editing ........................................................................................ 134
Split editing ......................................................................................... 136
The SmartMovie music video tool ......................................................... 140
CHAPTER 6: MONTAGE® THEMES AND EDITING . 145
Using themes ........................................................................................... 147
The Themes section of the Album ....................................................... 149
Creating theme clips ............................................................................ 149
Working with theme clips on the Timeline ......................................... 151
Anatomy of a theme ............................................................................ 153
Opening the Theme Editor tool............................................................ 156
Using the Theme Editor tool ................................................................ 157
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CHAPTER 7: VIDEO EFFECTS ................................. 161
Working with the effects list................................................................ 162
Changing effect parameters ................................................................. 164
Keyframing .......................................................................................... 166
Using keyframing ................................................................................ 169
Previewing and rendering .................................................................... 172
Video effects library ............................................................................... 172
Standard effects ...................................................................................... 174
Auto color correction ........................................................................... 175
Dream glow ......................................................................................... 175
Rotate ................................................................................................... 176
Noise reduction .................................................................................... 176
Stabilize ............................................................................................... 177
Speed ................................................................................................... 177
Ultimate effects ....................................................................................... 178
Blur ...................................................................................................... 179
Emboss ................................................................................................ 179
Old film ............................................................................................... 179
Soften ................................................................................................... 180
Stained glass ........................................................................................ 180
Luma key ............................................................................................. 181
2D Editor ............................................................................................. 181
Earthquake ........................................................................................... 181
Lens flare ............................................................................................. 182
Magnify ............................................................................................... 182
Motion blur .......................................................................................... 182
Water drop ........................................................................................... 183
Water wave .......................................................................................... 183
Black and white ................................................................................... 183
Color correction ................................................................................... 183
Color map ............................................................................................ 184
Invert ................................................................................................... 184
Lighting ............................................................................................... 185
Posterize .............................................................................................. 185
RGB color balance............................................................................... 185
Sepia .................................................................................................... 186
White balance ...................................................................................... 186
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CHAPTER 8: TWO-TRACK EDITING ....................... 187
Introducing the overlay track ............................................................... 187
A/B editing .......................................................................................... 189
The Picture-in-picture tool ................................................................... 190
The Chroma key tool ........................................................................... 196
Selecting colors ................................................................................... 202
CHAPTER 9: TRANSITIONS ..................................... 205
Transition types and their uses ............................................................ 207
Previewing transitions in your movie .................................................. 210
Audio transitions ................................................................................. 210
The Ripple Transition command ......................................................... 211
Trimming transitions ............................................................................. 212
Trimming with the Clip properties tool ............................................... 213
CHAPTER 10: STILL IMAGES .................................. 215
Editing still images ................................................................................. 217
Editing image clip properties ............................................................... 218
The Frame Grabber ............................................................................... 225
The Frame grabber tool ....................................................................... 225
CHAPTER 11: DISC MENUS ..................................... 227
Disc authoring in Studio ...................................................................... 229
Using menus from the Album .............................................................. 230
The DVD Player Control ..................................................................... 232
Editing menus on the Timeline ............................................................ 234
Editing with the Clip properties tool ................................................... 236
The Disc menu tool .............................................................................. 241
CHAPTER 12: THE CLASSIC TITLE EDITOR .......... 243
Launching the Classic Title Editor ...................................................... 244
The editor controls ................................................................................. 245
Title-type buttons ................................................................................. 245
Object toolbox ..................................................................................... 246
Editing-mode selection buttons ........................................................... 249
Object layout buttons ........................................................................... 251
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Clipboard and delete buttons ............................................................... 253
Text-styling controls ............................................................................ 253
The Classic Title Editor Album ............................................................. 255
The Looks Browser ............................................................................. 255
The Backgrounds section ..................................................................... 257
The Pictures section ............................................................................. 259
The Buttons section ............................................................................. 260
CHAPTER 13: THE MOTION TITLER ....................... 263
Launching (and leaving) the titler ........................................................ 265
File operations ..................................................................................... 267
The Motion Titler Album ...................................................................... 268
The Videos section .............................................................................. 270
The Photos section ............................................................................... 271
The Objects section ............................................................................. 272
The Looks section ................................................................................ 273
The Motions section ............................................................................ 278
Creating and editing Motion Titles ....................................................... 281
The Background Panel ......................................................................... 283
The Edit window ................................................................................. 285
Working with text ................................................................................ 288
Working with the Layer List................................................................ 292
Working with layer groups .................................................................. 299
CHAPTER 14: SOUND EFFECTS AND MUSIC ........ 303
The Timeline audio tracks ................................................................... 306
The CD audio tool ............................................................................... 308
The Background music tool ................................................................. 309
The Voice-over tool ............................................................................. 311
Trimming audio clips ............................................................................. 314
Trimming with the Clip properties tool ............................................... 314
Audio volume and mixing ...................................................................... 316
Anatomy of an audio clip .................................................................... 317
Adjusting audio on the Timeline ......................................................... 319
Transitions on the audio tracks ............................................................ 322
The Volume and balance tool .............................................................. 322
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CHAPTER 15: AUDIO EFFECTS .............................. 329
Noise reduction .................................................................................... 330
Ultimate effects ....................................................................................... 332
ChannelTool ........................................................................................ 332
Chorus ................................................................................................. 332
DeEsser ................................................................................................ 333
Equalizer .............................................................................................. 333
Grungelizer .......................................................................................... 334
Leveler ................................................................................................. 335
Reverb ................................................................................................. 335
Stereo Echo .......................................................................................... 336
Stereo Spread ....................................................................................... 336
CHAPTER 16: MAKING YOUR MOVIE ..................... 337
Output to disc media .............................................................................. 340
Output to file ........................................................................................... 344
Output to tape ......................................................................................... 352
Configuring a camera or video recorder... ........................................... 352
Output your movie to videotape .......................................................... 354
Output to the web ................................................................................... 355
APPENDIX A: SETUP OPTIONS .............................. 357
Project preferences .............................................................................. 358
Video and audio preferences ............................................................... 361
Make Disc settings .............................................................................. 366
Make File settings ................................................................................ 371
Make Real Media file settings ............................................................. 375
Make Windows Media file settings ..................................................... 378
Make tape settings ............................................................................... 380
APPENDIX B: TIPS AND TRICKS ............................ 383
Hardware ............................................................................................. 383
Graphics card settings .......................................................................... 385
Studio and computer animation ........................................................... 386
Table of contents ix
APPENDIX C: TROUBLESHOOTING ....................... 387
Technical help on-line ............................................................................ 388
Top support issues .................................................................................. 390
Errors or crashes during installation .................................................... 391
Studio crashes in Edit mode ................................................................ 392
Studio hangs when rendering ............................................................... 397
Studio hangs on launch or does not launch .......................................... 400
“Burning failed” error appears in Make Movie ................................... 402
DVDs do not play back, or appear blank ............................................. 404
APPENDIX D: VIDEOGRAPHY TIPS ........................ 405
Creating a shooting plan ...................................................................... 405
Editing ................................................................................................. 406
Rules of thumb for video editing ......................................................... 410
Soundtrack production ......................................................................... 412
Title ..................................................................................................... 413
APPENDIX E: GLOSSARY ........................................ 415
APPENDIX F: KEYBOARD SHORTCUTS ................ 433
INDEX ........................................................................ 437
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Before you start

Thank you for purchasing Pinnacle Studio. We hope you enjoy using the software.
This manual covers all versions of Studio, including Studio Ultimate and Studio Ultimate Collection. Differences between versions will be noted as applicable. Most of the time, the word “Studio” will be used generically to refer to all versions. Similarly, references to “Studio Ultimate” apply also to Studio Ultimate Collection unless otherwise stated.
If you have not used Studio before, we recommend that you keep the manual handy for reference even if you don’t actually read it all the way through.
In order to ensure that your Studio experience gets off on the right foot, please review the three topics below before continuing to Chapter 1: Using Studio.
Also highly recommended to new users is the Studio Tutorial. To launch the Tutorial, click its link on the “splash” screen when you start Studio, or use the Help Guided Tour menu command within the application itself.
Before you start xi
Equipment requirements
In addition to your Studio software, an efficient Studio editing system requires certain levels of hardware performance as noted in this section. Remember too that while specifications are important, they do not tell the whole story: the proper functioning of hardware devices can also depend on manufacturer-supplied driver software. Checking the maker’s web-site for driver updates and support information can often be helpful in solving problems with graphics cards, sound cards and other devices.
Note: Some features mentioned here require free or paid “activation” via the Internet, depending on your version of Studio.
Computer
Intel Pentium or AMD Athlon 1.8 GHz or higher
(2.4 GHz or higher recommended). Intel Core™ 2 or i7 2.4 GHz required for AVCHD editing (2.66 GHz for AVCHD 1920)
1 GB system memory recommended, 2 GB required
for AVCHD editing
Windows® 7, Windows Vista® with SP2, or
Windows XP with SP3
DirectX 9 or 10 compatible graphics card with 64
MB (128 MB or higher recommended); 256 MB for HD and AVCHD editing
DirectX 9 or higher compatible sound card 3.2 GB of disk space (plug-ins extra) DVD-ROM drive to install software.
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The following items are optional:
CD-R(W) burner for creating VideoCDs (VCDs) or
Super VideoCDs (SVCDs).
DVD-/+R(W) burner for creating DVD, HD DVD
and AVCHD discs.
Blu-ray burner for creating Blu-ray discs (Studio
Ultimate).
Sound card with surround-sound output for preview
of surround-sound mixes.
The hard drive
Your hard drive must be capable of sustained reading and writing at 4 MB/sec. Most drives are capable of this. The first time you capture, Studio will test your drive to make sure it is fast enough. Video in the DV format occupies 3.6 MB of hard drive space per second, so just four and a half minutes of DV video will consume a full gigabyte on the drive.
Tip: For capture from video tape, we recommend using a separate hard drive in order to avoid competition between Studio and other software, including Windows, for use of the drive during capture.
Video capture hardware
Studio can capture video from a variety of digital and analog sources. Please see “The Import From panel” on page 26.
Video output hardware
Studio can output video to:
Any HDV, DV or Digital8 camcorder or VCR. This
requires an OHCI-compliant IEEE-1394 (FireWire)
Before you start xiii
port (as provided by Pinnacle Studio DV). The camcorder must be set up to record from DV Input.
Any analog (8mm, Hi8, VHS, SVHS, VHS-C or
SVHS-C) camcorder or VCR. This requires Pinnacle Studio USB-700, PCI-500, PCI-700, or another Pinnacle device with analog outputs. Output to analog camcorders or VCRs is also possible using a Pinnacle Studio DV or other OHCI-compliant 1394 port if your DV or Digital8 camcorder or VCR can pass a DV signal through to its analog outputs (see your camcorder manual and Chapter 16: Making your movie, for more information).
Abbreviations and conventions
This guide uses the following conventions to help organize the material.
Terminology
AVCHD: A video data format used by some high­definition camcorders, and for creating DVD discs that can be read on Blu-ray players. Successful editing of AVCHD files requires more computing power than other formats supported by Studio.
DV: The term “DV” refers to DV and Digital8 camcorders, VCRs and tapes.
HDV: A “high-definition video” format that allows video in frame sizes of 1280x720 or 1440x1080 to be recorded in MPEG-2 format on DV media.
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1394: The term “1394” refers to OHCI-compliant IEEE-1394, FireWire, DV or i.LINK interfaces, ports and cables.
Analog: The term “analog” refers to 8mm, Hi8, VHS, SVHS, VHS-C or SVHS-C camcorders, VCRs and tapes, and to Composite/RCA and S-Video cables and connectors.
Buttons, menus, dialog boxes and windows
Names of buttons, menus and related items are written in italics to distinguish them from the surrounding text, whereas window and dialog names are written with initial capital letters. For example:
Click the Edit menu button to open your menu in the Classic Title Editor.
Choosing menu commands
The right arrowhead symbol () denotes the path for hierarchical menu items. For example:
Select Toolbox Generate Background Music.
Keyboard conventions
Key names are spelled with an initial capital and are underlined. A plus sign denotes a key combination. For example:
Press Ctrl+A to select all the clips on the Timeline.
Mouse clicks
When a mouse click is required, the default is always a left-click unless otherwise specified:
Right-click and select Go to Title/Menu Editor.
Before you start xv
On-line help
Two kinds of immediate help are always available while you are working in Studio:
Help file: Click the help button in the Studio
main menu bar, or select the Help Help topics menu, or press F1 to open Studio’s help file.
Tool tips: To find out what a button or other Studio
control does, pause your mouse pointer over it. A “tool tip” appears explaining its function.
xvi Pinnacle Studio
CHAPTER 1:

Using Studio

Creating movies with Studio is a three-step process:
1. Import: Import source video material – your “raw footage” – to your PC hard drive. Possible sources include analog videotape (8mm, VHS etc.), digital videotape (HDV, DV, Digital8), memory cards and other file-based media, and live video from a video camera, camcorder or webcam.
Import mode is covered in Chapter 2: Capturing and importing media.
2. Edit: Arrange your video material as desired by reordering scenes and discarding unwanted footage. Add visuals, such as transitions, titles and graphics, and supplementary audio, such as sound effects and background music. For DVD, Blu-ray Disc and VCD authoring, create interactive menus that give your audience a customized viewing experience.
Edit mode is the arena for most of your work in Studio. See “Edit mode” later in this chapter (page 4) for a fuller introduction.
Availability: Blu-ray Disc authoring is supported in Studio Ultimate and Studio Ultimate Collection only.
Chapter 1: Using Studio 1
3. Make movie: When your project is complete, generate a finished movie in your choice of format and storage medium: tape, VCD, S-VCD, DVD, AVI, MPEG, RealVideo, Windows Media and more.
Make Movie mode is covered in Chapter 16: Making your movie.
Setting the mode
Select which step of the movie-making process you want to work on by clicking one of the three mode buttons at the top left of the Studio window:
When you switch modes, the Studio screen changes to display the controls needed for the new mode.
Undo, Redo, Help, Support and Premium
The Undo, Redo, Help, Support and Premium buttons are always to be found in the top right corner of the Studio window, no matter which of the three modes you are currently working in.
Undo allows you to back out of any changes you
have made to your project during the current session, one step at a time.
Redo reinstates the changes one by one if you undo
too far.
The Help button launches Studio’s built-in help
system.
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The Support button opens Studio’s technical support
site in your web browser.
The Premium button lets you expand Studio by
purchasing and installing premium content. (See page 12 for details.)
All other controls on the Studio screen are dedicated to tasks within the current mode.
Setting options
Most options in Studio are set using two tabbed dialog boxes.
The first lets you control options related to Edit mode. It has two tabs:
The other dialog box is concerned with options relating to Make Movie mode. It has three tabs, one for each of the three movie output types:
Each panel of both dialog boxes can be opened individually with a corresponding command on the Setup menu (e.g. Setup Project preferences). Once either dialog box is open, however, all of its panels are available through the tabs.
Chapter 1: Using Studio 3
For simplicity, we generally refer to the different options panels independently, as in “the Project preferences options panel”.
Detailed explanations of the options in both dialog boxes are contained in Appendix A: Setup Options.
Additional options for importing are provided on the Mode panel of the Import Wizard. The options available depend on the type of media you plan to import, as explained under “The Mode panel” on page
33.

EDIT MODE

Studio opens in Edit mode each time it is launched, because that is the mode you use most often. The Edit mode display includes three main areas.
The Album stores resources you will use in your movies, including your captured video scenes.
The Movie Window is where you create your edited movie by arranging video and sound clips, and by applying transitions and effects.
The Player provides playback and previewing for whichever item is currently selected in Studio. That may be an Album resource – such as a video scene, title or sound effect – or your edited movie, complete with transitions, titles, effects and several audio tracks. The Player is covered below.
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See Chapter 3: The Album and Chapter 4: The Movie Window for detailed information on those topics.
Studio in Edit mode with the Album, the Player, and the Movie Window, shown here in its Storyboard view.
The Player
The Player displays a preview of your edited movie, or of the item currently selected in the Album.
It consists of two main areas: a preview window and playback controls. The preview window displays video
images. The playback controls allow you to play the video, or go to an exact position within it. These controls come in two formats: standard and DVD.
Standard mode
The standard playback controls are similar to those on a camcorder or VCR. They are used for viewing ordinary video.
Chapter 1: Using Studio 5
DVD mode
The DVD playback controls emulate the navigation controls on a DVD player or remote control. Use them for previewing your DVD or other disc productions, including menu interaction.
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The preview window
This is a point of focus in Studio because you use it so often, especially for previewing your movie. It can also be used to display:
Any type of Album content. Still images or titles from your movie. Changes to video effects in real time while you
adjust the parameter controls for the effects.
Still frames from your video. While viewing a still
frame, you can step by as little as a single frame in either direction with the “jog” controls.
Resizing the video preview
If your screen dimensions permit, Studio lets you enlarge the Player – and therefore the video preview – by means of the Player size slider. This control appears above the Player to the left of the Undo button when reorganizing the display is possible.
Drag the control knob rightwards to increase the Player size, or leftwards to decrease it. The leftmost knob position corresponds to the smallest (and default) size.
Resizing the Player optimizes your use of screen “real
estate” to obtain a larger video preview.
Chapter 1: Using Studio 7
The DVD toggle button
Switch between the two playback modes with the DVD toggle button at the bottom right-hand corner of the Player. This button is only available when your edited movie contains at least one menu.
Playback controls
The Player presents either of two sets of playback controls depending on the playback mode you choose.
When you play your movie back as ordinary video, you will be using the standard playback controls. If your movie uses disc menu navigation, you can play it back as an optical disc with interactive on-screen menus by using the DVD playback controls. Both groups of controls are covered below.
The full-screen preview button: This button, just above the top right-hand corner of the preview window, switches to a full-screen preview. It is available in both playback modes. On a single-monitor system, the full-screen display ends when your movie ends, or you double-click the screen or press the Esc key. See the Video preview options in the Video and Audio Preferences panel (page 361) for settings that apply to multiple-monitor systems.
The Video preview options on the Video and audio preferences options panel let you direct the full-screen preview to the secondary monitor on your system if there is one. In Studio Ultimate, you can simultaneously send your preview to an external device, if desired.
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Standard playback controls
These buttons control playback in the Player. Play / Pause: The Play button previews the
movie from the current position. Once preview begins, Play becomes Pause. When playback is paused, the Album scene or Movie Window clip at which previewing stopped remains selected. The [Space] key can also be used to start and stop playback.
Go to beginning: This button halts playback and skips back to the first frame of the material being previewed.
Fast reverse, Fast forward: These buttons let you preview your movie at two, four or ten times the normal speed, in either direction. Use them to scan for a particular piece of video you want to work with. Click the buttons repeatedly to loop through the speed factors.
Loop: This button causes the currently-selected clips in the Movie Window to play back repeatedly. This feature is especially convenient whilst selecting and editing add-on effects and transitions. Click any playback button to halt looping. The loop button lights up while looping is active. Looping is maintained even if you switch playback speeds.
Jog buttons: This pair of controls normally steps your movie forward and backward by one frame at a time. To step by seconds, minutes or hours instead of frames, select the corresponding field in the counter (see below), then use the jog buttons to modify it.
The Player scrubber
Use the Player scrubber to quickly traverse your captured video or edited movie in either direction. The
Chapter 1: Using Studio 9
scrubber position corresponds to the position of the current frame in the captured video file (not just the current scene) or in the edited movie (not just the current clip). Thus the scrubber bar always represents the entire length of the content being viewed.
As you move the scrubber, the preview window shows the current frame. If you have activated the audio scrubbing button in the Movie Window, you will also hear snatches of your movie’s audio as you scrub. See page 98 for details.
The ability of the preview to keep up with the scrubber depends on the speed of your computer. If you move the Player scrubber slowly, the preview display responds smoothly. As you increase the rate at which you move the scrubber, the preview will jump frames. The point at which it does so depends on your hardware. The smoothness of the preview also diminishes as the overall length of the material being scrubbed increases.
The counter
The counter displays the current playback position in hours, minutes, seconds and frames. You can directly modify the counter fields to select an exact frame to view or at which to start playback. Simply click on the number you wish to change and type a new value. To move to a different field, click again or use the Left and Right arrow keys.
You can also modify the value in a selected field by using the jog buttons beside the counter or the Up and Down arrow keys.
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The master volume slider
This control sets the overall audio volume during preview playback. It is equivalent to turning up the master volume on your sound card using the system volume tool. It does not affect the volume of the final movie Studio creates in Make Movie mode.
The small loudspeaker icon at the right of the control serves as a master mute button during playback.
DVD playback controls
These controls include the four standard transport buttons detailed above (Play/Pause, Fast reverse, Fast forward,
Go to beginning) plus the DVD Player
Control, which is described under “The DVD Player
Control” on page 232.
Further editing topics
Please see the following for details on specific editing topics:
Chapter 5: Video clips Chapter 6: Themes and theme editing Chapter 7: Video effects Chapter 8: Two-track editing Chapter 9: Transitions Chapter 10: Still images Chapter 11: Disc menus
Chapter 1: Using Studio 11
Chapter 12: The Classic Title Editor Chapter 13: The Motion Titler Chapter 14: Sound effects and music Chapter 15: Audio effects
Expanding Studio
One way to add pizzazz to your productions is to use a variety of video and audio filters, animated transitions, titles, VCD and DVD menus, themes and sound effects.
Studio includes an extensive selection of hundreds of content items and special effects, but it’s also designed to grow along with your needs. When you want a particular filter, transition, menu or effect that isn’t part of the basic set, an easy-to-use upgrade mechanism lets you find, purchase and install the materials you need without even leaving the program.
New tools, new media, new frontiers
You can purchase additional media and filters in any of three ways from within Studio:
With the Help Purchase activation keys
menu command (or the premium shortcut button at the top right of the Studio screen).
This opens a special browser window in which you can access a catalog page for any type of premium content that interests you.
With the Album commands More transitions, More
themes, More sound effects and More menus.
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These commands are found on the dropdown lists in the corresponding sections of the Album. They will enable you to download, try out and purchase additional premium content that was not included with the program installation.
By clicking the activate buttons found in some parts
of Studio.
These buttons can be found whenever premium content is on display within Studio. The one above, when seen in the Audio effects tool and the Video effects tool, would let you activate a pack of audio or video filters. You may encounter similar buttons in the Album that let you purchase all the media on a particular Album page as a theme pack.
How activation works
“Activating” premium content for Studio means to obtain a license allowing you unrestricted use of the content on the single machine where Studio is installed. The licensing mechanism employs two distinct but mutually related codes:
An activation key for each premium content item you
purchase;
Your Passport, which is a number generated the first
time you install Studio on your computer. You can view your Passport by selecting the Help My Passport menu command.
Because the Passport is specific to one computer, you will need to obtain new activation keys if you install Studio on a different machine. These will be provided
Chapter 1: Using Studio 13
at no charge, but your user licenses for both Studio and any premium content you have obtained then apply to the new machine only.
Note: Although your Passport is specific to an individual computer, it is not affected by ordinary hardware modifications such as adding or removing expansion cards, drives or memory.
If you don’t have an Internet connection...
You can purchase and apply premium content activation keys even if you don’t have an Internet connection on the computer where Studio is installed. When you click one of the unlock links within Studio, a dialog will be displayed showing information needed for ordering the specific content you want, including:
An Internet URL where you can activate the content Numeric identifiers for the Studio program and the
item you want to activate
Your Passport and your Serial Number
Navigate to the given URL from another computer, enter the information, and complete the purchase as directed. You will then be given an activation key with which you can activate the content on the original computer by using the Help Enter Activation Keys menu command.
Hiding and showing premium content
If you would prefer not to view the premium content and features available in Studio, open the Project
preferences options panel and uncheck either or both of Show premium content and Show premium features.
(See page 358.)
14 Pinnacle Studio
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