With the playhead already parked at the end of the timeline, I’m going to tap minus 12 enter. In this case, I’ve decided that I want a 12 frame fade out, half a second. My playhead is already parked at the end of the timeline and before you create the fade, you need to decide how long you want to make the fade. There’s a much better way and I call it “One Fade to Rule Them All” and it involves using a solid generator. I’ll go ahead and undo those last three steps. But as you see, this can be quite time consuming and if you have alot of layers, say more than I have here, this could be quite tedious. Now you could select each individual clips end point and press Command T to add a dissolve at the end of each graphic. As I skim over it, you can see it’s a text build and we want to fade out all of those text graphics at once. Let me show you how, it’s awesome! Here’s a stack of graphics that make up an end title. If you have a stack of video layers or graphics and you need them to all fade out or fade in at once, you can use a single generator to accomplish this. In this episode, I’m going to show you one of my favorite time saving tricks of all-time. Welcome to Final Cut Pro X in Under 5 minutes.
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