![]() I'm going to just select this shot and press B. So let's just start with the insert edit. We have insert clip, keyboard shortcut B, and I have overlay clip, keyboard shortcut N. And now I have my shot marked, and I'm going to start looking at these commands right here. I'm going to go to the end of this clip, so I'll press page down. I'm going to undo that because what I actually want to do is start using the keyboard shortcuts for editing. Alright, so if you want to turn off that snapping behavior, that's how you do that, okay. So if I turn that off, and then I drag this down to the timeline you can see that it doesn't magnetize to the edit. Snapping is down here, keyboard shortcut shift-S. This time I'm going to do that same thing but I'm going to disable snapping. I'm going to undo that, cmd-Z or ctrl-Z on a PC. And if I let go, you can see that it goes from one shot to the next. By default, snapping is on, okay so you can see that it kind of magnetizes to this edit. And if I drag and drop, you can see I'm able to edit it right in after the first shot. I'm going to mark an in, and I'll mark an out here. So I've identified the part where I want the shot to start. Okay, so let's find a moment that we would like to edit in. Page up, by the way, goes back an edit, and page down goes forward. ![]() So now I'm at the very end of this shot and I'm ready to edit this shot right after it. If you're on a laptop, that could be function down arrow. And if I want to make sure that my playhead is at the very end of this shot, I use my page down key. Now let's see what he's doing at the end of this shot. And you can see here that he's doing the same action, but we don't see the tray. I'm going to just single click and it loads in the trimmer. And I have a dipping chocolate long shot and I have dipping chocolate medium shot. I'm going to go over to my media window and give myself a little more room here. Okay, so let's go ahead and find that shot. And what I would like to do is edit to another shot where he's doing the same action. And he is dipping the ganache balls in the chocolate and putting them on the tray. So now I have Jean Michel out at the default values for this particular shot. I'm just going to right-click on the shot in the editor and then go to Transform and Fit to Frame. I'm going to return this to the default values 'cause that's where I want to start out in this sequence. One thing that I did do, was I sort of zoomed in on this shot to show you exactly how to do that within the viewer. So if you're starting here, go ahead and watch the previous movie and edit a clip in the timeline yourself. Right now I just have one clip in my timeline which I edited in, in the last movie. Now that we have a basic understanding of the editing interface in HitFilm Express let's learn more about the editing tools.
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