- Change the Size of Text in the Browser and Timeline
- Zooming the Timeline
- Zooming Faster
- The Two Fastest Ways to Zoom
- Vertical Movement
- Image Quality in the Viewer vs. the Canvas
- Monitor Your Video Full Screen
- Remove Scroll Bars for Better Playback
- Back to Square One
- iChat Theater
- Green Is Not Just for Stoplights
- Visibility Lights and the Arrow Keys
- More Visibility Shortcuts
- The Secrets of the Right-Pointing Arrow
- Displaying Audio or Video Clip Names
- Display a Filmstrip of Images in the Timeline
- Displaying Source or Auxiliary Timecode
- Display Field Interlacing
- Duplicating Browser Clips
- Sorting Browser Columns
- Sorting Out Multiple Issues
- A Faster Way to Move Columns
- Customize Browser Columns
- Searching Browser Columns
- Searching Effects
- Viewing Thumbnails in the Browser
- Display Images Instead of Names in the Browser
- Fancy Light Table Tricks
- More Browser Fun
- Browser Keyboard Shortcuts
- Hidden Tricks with Tabs
- Jumping Between Tabs
- Riddle Me a Riddle
- Selecting Multiple Clips
- Selecting an Edit Point
- Using Range Selection
- Get Moving with Timecode
- Locking Tracks
- Toggling Display Modes
- Scrolling the Timeline
- Scrubbing the Playhead
- Find the Missing Playhead
- Scrubbing Timeline Thumbnails
- Discover Project Properties
- Markers Got Spiffed Up
- Markers Can Be Moved!
- A Better Way to Move Between Markers
- Reading Clip Markers
- Using Markers to Log Footage
- Deleting Multiple Clip Markers
- Markers Have Default Colors
- Using Markers in Multiclips
- Option Means Opposite
- Other Option Key Tricks
- The Fastest Way to Find a Keyboard Shortcut
- I Feel the Need—for Speed!
- Create a Custom Keyboard Shortcut
- “A”—An Amazing Authority
- Wonderful, Wacky, W
- How to Remove a Button
- Creating a Custom Button
- Reset/Remove All Buttons in a Button Bar
- Additional Thoughts
Monitor Your Video Full Screen
Turn your computer monitor into a full-screen video monitor.
First, a very important warning: Using your computer monitor to make color decisions about video can be dangerous because the color, black, mid-tone gray, and white levels of your computer monitor don’t match a video monitor.
Given that, there are many times where we want to look more closely at our images. As Academy Award–winning film editor/sound designer Walter Murch once said, “We look at television, we look into film.”
As our images move from SD to HD, there’s more detail to examine, and the small Viewer and Canvas screens in Final Cut Pro don’t make that detail easy to see.
To turn on full-screen display, choose View > Video Playback > Digital Cinema Desktop Preview – Main.
Your screen will likely go black and you’ll think you’ve just destroyed everything. Not to panic! Press the spacebar and your Timeline will begin to play—full screen!
To switch back to Final Cut, press Esc. To toggle back to the full-screen display, press Command+F12. (If nothing happens, it’s because the operating system is messing with your keyboard shortcuts again. See page 23 in Chapter 1 to learn how to fix this.)