![]() ![]() But that has issues (which I’ll address in a moment). Now, in FCPX, the intuitive course of action is to dupe a project. Before, if you wanted to create a subsequent version of a video, all you had to do was duplicate a sequence. Many people have lamented the fact that versioning in Final Cut X is more clunky than the legacy version. So I started thinking: if you can create a full video in a comp without creating a project, do you even need to create projects at all? A Whole New World In watching John’s tutorial I learned that you can actually create a comp without creating a project first (they save the creation of a project until the very end). You would build a project, then select all the clips, then group them into a compound clip (which from here out I will just call “comp” for short). But this is what surprised me…I had previously thought that in order to create a compound clip, you had to have a project first. In the tutorial, John mentioned that in their shared editing environment, they use compound clips for the various iterations of a project, as opposed to Projects. Last week on FCP.co, I was reading and watching an FCPX tutorial by John Davidson at Magic Feather Inc., a video production agency in Los Angeles that does work for high-profile channels and TV shows. ![]()
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