NOTE: This example uses only one Event and seven clips. I’ve added a bunch more keywords to my clips using FCP X. However, if you create keywords inside Final Cut, there’s no way to go back and apply those keywords to the source media clips stored in the Finder. NOTE: When you import media with Finder Tags into FCP X – with the option to create keywords from Finder tags – the new keywords will apply to the entire clip. When I import just the Animals folder into Final Cut Pro X, with Keywords: From Folder checked, the folder names are automatically added as keywords to the clip. They are stored in a Pond5 folder, then inside an Animals folder, then the clips. When we import clips using the Media Import window, we have the ability to automatically create keywords using either folder names or Finder Tags.įor instance, here is a collection of clips. Website: Price: $19.99 (Available in the Mac App Store) Metadata is no longer locked inside Final Cut. These tags then travel wherever the clips go so that the next time they are imported into Final Cut Pro X – on any system – the Finder tags immediately convert back into keywords, allowing all our logging information to be restored into a new or existing FCP X project. Here’s the benefit: After adding keywords to our clips in Final Cut Pro X, we can now save those keywords as Finder tags back into the media files stored in the Finder. Intelligent Assistance just released a new product – FindrCat – that allows us to tag media files with keywords applied in Final Cut Pro X.
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