|
Organizing for a Massive Project
by
Larry Jordan
[This article was first published in the November, 2007, issue of
Larry's Final Cut Pro Newsletter. Click here to subscribe.]
Tim Wilson writes:
Please tell me where I can find your most complete advice about organizing
a *massive* editing project -- close on 200 hours of material that
has to be sugared down to 1 hour. I don't mean your excellent basic
instructions on setting up media vs project/non-timecode files, but
more detailed suggestions about what works for you when doing a project
of this size, e.g. breaking reels down into subclips and organizing
those.
At present, we have the 200 HDV tapes captured in 10 min. segments
and arranged by bins, each named according to the individual reels.
My plan is to leave those 200 bins untouched, but to make subclips
of selected material, and put those subclips into either or both of:
- Another set of bins named by theme or type (principal interview/scenics/B-roll
etc/), and
- A *long* timeline that would rough-assemble all main sequences
of the film
Does this make sense?
The Final Cut project file and all media would then be shipped to
our Editor for her to screen only the Selects, and go from there.
As usual, any help as usual is much appreciated!
Larry replies: Tim, your basic approach makes sense. However, keep
two things in mind:
- Final Cut tends to slow down when you have thousands of clips
in the Browser. Minimizing the number of Browser clips you need
is a good idea.
- Final Cut allocates RAM memory based on the number of clips
in the timeline. FCP 6 supports up to 12 hours of material in one
sequence, but if that is made of lots of small clips, you will see
a performance slow-down.
If anyone else has suggestions on how to manage large projects, please
let me know and I'll share them with everyone.
UPDATE - Nov. 27
Tom Wolsky writes:
I would recommend Shane Ross's DVD on organizing material in FCP
projects.
Shane Ross wrote in to suggest the same thing:
I have a tutorial DVD on this and many other organizational tips.
I believe I gave you a copy. GETTING ORGANIZED WITH FINAL CUT PRO.
http://training.creativecow.net/dvd_store/get_organized_fcp/get_organized_fcp.html
Brandon Klein writes:
Great newsletter!
We are in the final stages of editing down approx 320 hours to 80-90
minutes. The project file for all the footage- 25,000 clips is 138.3MB,
and takes FCP 10 minutes just to open on the latest hardware. I feel
the pain of your readers question.
This may be a very simplistic answer, but working with sub clips
turned out to be a nightmare for us and we stopped using them very
quickly. (In out points- dragged to the timeline for the editor to
watch real rough cuts worked considerably better)
We divided the 25,000 clips by content type so that each file was
between 10MB and 20MB. These were easily manageable.
We then did rough cuts of each category and were able to bring those
timelines over to a new project to create the final timeline. We
would often have 2-3 projects open (the original content type projects)
at a time so we could access some of the raw footage if needed- but
always work on a timeline that was in a different project file all
by itself.
Having these smaller content project files also allowed more than
one editor to work on different parts of the film simultaneously
over the network.
Perhaps too simple, but effective nonetheless.
Larry replies: Thanks for letting us know. Also, Russell Stiggants sent in a
long reply, which I'll put in the next issue.
Related article: Getting Organized for Editing
Larry Jordan is a post-production consultant and an Apple-Certified Trainer in Digital Media with over 25 years experience as producer, director and editor with network, local and corporate credits. Based in Los Angeles, he's a member of both the Directors Guild of America and the Producers Guild of America.
The information in this article is believed to be accurate at the time of publication. However, the author assumes no liability in case things go wrong. Please use your best judgment in applying these suggestions.
The opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author. This newsletter has not been reviewed or sanctioned by Apple or any other third party. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners and are mentioned here for editorial purposes only.
Links to my website home page or this article are welcome and don't require prior permission.
|