Lesson Review 249
This may seem tedious, but the more time you spend with your footage, the
more familiar with it you’ll become. And that means you’ll have a good idea
of all your options when you’re constructing your movie.
Lesson Review
1. What is coverage?
2. What is the single most important rule of camera movement?
3. If you know youre going to be relying on iMovie’s video stabilizer, what
can you do to improve your chances of getting a good shot?
4. When should you capture 1080i footage at the full setting?
5. How do you see movie clips shot with a still camera?
6. How do you unmark a clip that you already rejected?
7. What preference must be set to add keywords to your shots?
8. How do you filter the view of the Event Browser to show only footage with
a certain keyword applied?
Answers
1. All the different shots photographed for a single event.
2. Never move the camera without a reason.
3. Hold the camera as steady as possible, and frame your subject with extra
space around it.
4. When you’re going to be projecting your movie on a very large HD screen.
5. Import them along with your still images into iPhoto, and they’ll automat-
ically appear in the iMovie Event Library in the iPhoto Videos category.
6. Set the Event Browser to Show All (or show Rejected Only), select the
section you want to unmark, and click the Unmark button or press U.
7. Show Advanced Tools.
8. Show the Keyword Filtering Pane and click the green button next to the
keyword in the list.
Lesson Files After installation:
~/Movies/iMovie Projects/ATS-Bhutan - (Start)
Time This lesson takes approximately 30 minutes to complete.
Goals Learn some fundamental editing rules and guidelines
Use insert, replace, and other advanced editing techniques
Employ cutaways to create flexible edits
Use the Clip Trimmer and Precision Editor with confidence
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