Also from the YouTube channel "Film Editing Pro" is an overview of 3 editing methods: 1- three points editing (Two Screen Editing, in CinGG) 2- Timeline editing (Cut and Paste + Drag and Drp, in CinGG) 3- Pancake (stacked) editing See: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tsohm9SE9Mk Panckake editing start at 3:31 Only Premiere Pro has pancake editing functionality [Note: actually Lighworks and even DaVinci Resolve have this functionality]. PP indeed allows you to open multiple timelines, place them on top of each other in a stack, and operate between clips of these with Drag and Drop. One feature of pancake editing is the ability to see a timeline on the Source Monitor (our Viewer window); thus one timeline is seen on one monitor and the other on the other monitor (The classic Program Monitor -Compositor window, in CinGG). In fact, it would be difficult to do editing without seeing the contents of the clips on the monitor. In CinGG, in my opinion, we can do a workaround that simulates pancake editing even though it is not quite the same. Just open multiple instances of CinGG, bring the program windows of all instances closer together, and operate between timelines not with Drag and Drop but with Cut and Paste. We can't display a timeline in the Viewer window, but we don't need to since each instance's timeline carries its own Compositor window where to see the contents of the edits. I am convinced that opening multiple instances of CinGG is no more heavy than opening multiple timelines in PP. What are your thoughts on this?
participants (1)
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Andrea paz