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The post-production workflow, P. 16) – Apple Final Cut Pro 6 User Manual

Page 17

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16

Part I

An Introduction to Final Cut Pro

Step 4:

Post-production

Post-production is where you organize and assemble your production footage, putting
scenes in proper order, selecting the best takes, and eliminating unnecessary elements.
Production sound is synchronized (with the picture), edited, sometimes rerecorded,
and mixed. Music is composed and added. Footage is color-corrected and special
effects are created. The final movie is output to tape, film, or some other high-quality
media format.

Step 5:

Distribution

Distribution is when you release a movie for viewing. This may involve theater
screenings, video and DVD releases, festival submissions, or web delivery.

The Post-Production Workflow

The post-production phase begins with the raw source footage and ends with a
completed movie, ready for making distribution copies. As technology evolves,
post-production continues to proliferate into an increasing variety of jobs and tasks.
Where there was once a single editor who was responsible for the majority of the
post-production process, there may now be a whole special effects team, an audio
department, a colorist (responsible for color correction), and a number of assistant
editors keeping track of all the footage. Final Cut Pro is at the heart of the
post-production pipeline, allowing you to organize and assemble media from
multiple sources into a finished product.

Here is an overview of the basic Final Cut Pro post-production workflow. As you begin
your project, remember that there are no hard and fast rules for editing. Different
editors have different working styles and, given the same source material, no two
editors will cut the same finished program. The workflow described here offers just one
example of how you might approach a typical project.