Depending on how the
stereo footage was filmed, you may need to edit the left or right
eye image after you create a clip containing a stereo track. For example,
you may need to flip one of the images or fix brightness or colour discrepancies
between the left and right eye images. You can do this cleanup
in a Record Area view. If you already brought your clip into Batch FX,
you can edit the stereo track from the Batch FX timeline.
Note the following when
editing a stereo track:
- You can edit the media of the individual
left and right eye layers but not the metadata. For example, you
can slip one layer or replace its media, but you cannot trim only
one of the layers.
- Stereo sync is on by default. With stereo
sync, changes applied to one layer of a stereo track are automatically
applied to the other layer.
- If you are making changes that affect
the media of a stereo track such as applying soft effects, you can
remove the stereo sync from the layers and apply the changes to
only one of the layers.
- If you applied the same soft effects
to unsynced layers and the values on each layer are different, you
can resynchronize the values so that they are the same on both layers.
- You cannot do vertical editing or vertical
compositing between stereo layers.
For more information
on what type of work you can do with stereo tracks and how stereo
tracks are represented on the timeline, see
Stereo Tracks.
- If you want to convert a video track
into a stereo track, you can do so directly on the timeline as long
as the video track contains two layers that share the same metadata.
Do this, for example,
with imported EDLs where the left and right eye images are multi-assembled
on separate tracks.
See
Converting a Video Track to a Stereo Track.
- If you want to convert the layers of
a stereo track into two mono video tracks, you can do so directly
on the timeline.
Do this, for example,
if you need to change the metadata of one of the layers.
See
Converting a Stereo Track to Video Tracks.
- If you want to change the focus plane
of a shot, you can adjust the convergence with an Axis soft effect.
See
Creating Axis Soft Effects.