You can use many different methods to trim video clips in iMovie. You can bring in a section of a clip, trim the ends by dragging or using keyboard commands, split the clip and remove unwanted sections, or adjust the clip ends with the Precision Trimmer and other tools. Some methods are easier while others are more versatile.
Trim unwanted frames using the shortcut menu. In the iMovie app on your Mac, press and hold the R key, and drag across a clip in the timeline to select the range of frames you want to keep. Control-click the clip, and choose Trim Selection from the shortcut menu. Luckily it's easy to cut out parts of a video in iMovie. Start by clicking on the clip in the view on the left. Once the clip is selected the frame of it will turn yellow and so that the edge turns.
Check out 8 Ways To Trim Video In iMovie at YouTube for closed captioning and more options.
Video Transcript: Hi this is Gary with MacMost.com. On today's episode let's look at all the different ways you can trim video in iMovie.I often get asked how do you trim video using iMovie. This is a difficult question to answer because there are so many different ways to do it.So let's create a new project in iMovie. I'll just use No Theme right here. Then I'm going to just drop a simple clip in there. Let's drop a clip here of the waves. So I will grab this and drag it into the project here. Let's say we want to cut out a portion here so we just have this portion in the middle. We don't have everything at the beginning and at the end. Now let's look at all the different ways we can do this.The first method is we can simply drag the edges of this movie over. So we can drag it to wherever we want it to start and where we want it to end. There we go, we've done it. We can add things before or after and we only get that middle part of the clip.Now another way we can do it is by only selecting a portion of this. If I click outside to de-select it notice that as I move my cursor here you can see at the bottom part of the video I get a different type of cursor than at the top part. That is because at the bottom part I can select where I want. I can look at the preview at the upper right, see exactly where I want to select, and start dragging. Once I drag I can still alter it a little bit by moving the handles here. Once I've got that I can simply go to Modify and Trim Selection right here and I get the beginning and end trimmed off.Another thing you can do is you can split the clip where you want and do it in two places to get this extra in the middle. So I can move the selection right here to the exact point I want and then I go to Modify, Split Clip or Command B (I remember that just by thinking as B as in break). I can break the clip right there, I can break it somewhere else and then I can select these sections here and Delete. I get the same result.Now this is a little more useful because not only can I use this to trim the clip but if I want to put something in here like some sort of title or video I can do that here as well. So this method is a little more versatile. There is more you can do with it.With the other method you can trim the clip and then adjust the trimming later on. But you can do it with this method as well which may surprise you.So I delete the beginning and end there. I can still grab the edge here, click and drag it out and I can get more of the video. So going with the whole physical metaphor of actually cutting some film it doesn't actually apply here because it is so easy to add that film back at the end and at the beginning as well.Another command you can use is Trim to Playhead. So I move the playhead right here and then I go to Modify, Trim to Playhead or use Option and Slash, which kind of makes sense as you are slashing the film, Option Slash and it is going to take off at the beginning. If I move the playhead over towards the end it is going to be smart enough to trim from the end instead of from the beginning since the majority of the film is to the left. I end up with the same result here and just like with the other ones I can expand it back later on.Now if you want some precision you can use the keyboard to move the edge of a clip frame by frame. So to do that you want to select the edge. So click on the edge right here and you can see it is selected like that. Then you can see under Modify you've got Trim Clip Edge. Nudge Left and right are the period and comma keys and you can hold the shift key down to make it go a little faster. So now that I've got that there I can use the comma. You can see I can move that in frame by frame. Hold the shift key down and it goes by bunches.You can do the same thing with either edge. If I want to do it on this edge you can go like that. This really works out well say if you are going to trim something like this as one of the methods and then you decide well I want to get this really precise here at the end so you select it and now you can make adjustments to exactly where you want. You can do that even after you've added another clip here at the end just to get this perfect or have it enter the transition between the two clips perfectly.Now another method I want to show you involves when you bring the clip in. So instead of actually selecting this clip like that I can drag the handles in on the clip to exactly the area I want. Then bring it in. This doesn't mean you can't expand the clip later on because I can drag the edges to get more of it. So if you have a very long clip and you know there is a section you want to use, instead of bringing the whole thing in and then trimming it, you can kind of pre trim it before you drag and drop the thing in, at least to get it close. Then you can nudge it or otherwise modify the trim after it is in the timeline.Here is yet another way to trim a clip. You can bring up the Clip Trimmer by going to the Window menu or Command and then backslash. That brings up just a different interface here where you can trim. So you can here drag the edges over without the trimmed part disappearing which is useful. You can also drag in the middle here to move the whole clip. So if you get the exact size you want of the clip, exactly how long it will be, then you can drag this along to change it a little bit. It is great if you have already synced up some music to what you are doing or something, or some other audio, you can then use this to basically move it around without changing the duration of the clip. Then when you are done you can just tap on the arrow there and then you have the trimmed clip right there.Now if you have already added some other video, say right after this, and you want to trim the clip here there is a lot of different ways to do it. One is to double click on the transition between them even though there is no transition there. Then you can drag this. This is called the Precision Editor. You can see exactly where the trim on each of these clips will occur and which part will be trimmed out. If there was a transition here there would be a little bit of a gap where you would see the transition would show both temporarily.You can bring this up with Window, Show and Hide Precision Editor here but it is easier just to double click on the space between them. When you are done each clip has been trimmed and there's the transition which still remains between them if you added a transition. So let's look at that. If I look in the Transitions and say I do a Cross Dissolve and I drop that here instead of having a line I double click on it and I can change the duration of it but I can also go to Show Precision Editor and now I see the transition here, an area where both clips are being shown. I can still trim either one by just sliding around.IMovie can works on Mac, and other iOS devices. Here, I'll take the Mac version as an example. You can follow the below steps to split or cut a video into several parts as you like: Step 1. Open the iMovie on the Mac, and click the 'Project' tab and continue to select 'Create New' 'Movie' from the pop-up. Option 2: Use 'Clip Trimmer' in iMovie. Or you can select 'Show Clip Trimmer' (command + /) to trim your video. With Clip Trimmer, you need to click on video and move the cursor to trim the head and the end of video. In this processus you can preview the head and end of. A cutaway clip is a video clip you paste over another, usually related, clip in order to show two different elements of a single event. You could show someone about to enter a surprise party, and then cut away to a view of the people waiting inside, for example. Cutaway clips are also useful for covering portions of a clip that aren't very good.
For anyone who uses iMovie '09, or probably even '08:
Today I ran into the problem of wanting to split a single clip inside of a single event into two separate events. If you're cool, then you already know that you can just highlight a selection, right-click, and select the 'Split Clip Before Selection' option. BAM! Problem solved.
Imovie Cut Tool
HOWEVER, If you're like me and you originally recorded your footage on your DV tape continuously (without breaks between 'events' or days) then your tape will capture into iMovie as one continuous clip, with today's date. iMovie doesn't seem to be set up to split such a clip into separate events because of its relatively new non-destructive editing feature, which really is great.
Whether or not iMovie will allow you to split your clip into separate events may depend on how your camera records footage onto your DV tape. For example, there's this other tape I have that not only imported the correct date for some of the footage, but also allowed me to split clips into separate events. If that's the case with your tapes, then, lucky you.
But how about if you select a few expendable frames between the two sections you want split and then delete those few frames? Sure, your event will then look like it has two separate clips in it, but when you try to split them into separate events, it still doesn't work–what the F!
If you give up now, you'll just be selling out to THE MAN. So instead, For those of you as vehemently anal-retentive about your iMovie '09 event organization as I decided to be this afternoon, here's a workaround I found, with a little inspiration from stuff I saw on them internets, which I won't cite, because I don't remember where I saw it.
(After-my-initial-post-Update: Hey, skip to the bottom and read the thing in italics before you read the rest of this, it might save you time)
1. In the finder, I went to Movies/iMovie Events folder. There are all of my events in folders, including the one I want to split into two separate events ('YC08 + Grand Canyon').
How To Use Imovie
2. I created a new folder inside of 'iMovie Events', called it YC08, and then copied and pasted all of the contents of the the 'YC08 + Grand Canyon' folder into the new 'YC08' folder. It was over 13GB, which is about right for a 63 min DV tape.
3. I checked iMovie (I still had it open). It didn't update this new folder live, so I closed iMovie and reopened it. The new 'YC08' folder is there where I created it, along with my original 'YC08 + Grand Canyon' folder! I renamed my original folder simply to Grand Canyon.
4. I selected & rejected the YC08 footage from the Grand Canyon event, and did the same to the Grand Canyon footage from the YC08 event. How to get minecraft for free with multiplayer pc. Then I right clicked each clip in each of the two events and adjusted the date and time. They adjusted independently of each other, as thought they were separate clips (which they now are).
Moving Clips In Imovie
5. Then I went to File>Moved Rejected Clips to Trash. That brought up a progress bar that took about ten minutes. It looks like this process does some destructive editing to the original clips, because when I compare how big each of the two folders is inside of the iMovie Events folder, they're different sizes now (one is 8.4GB and the other is 5.4GB, which adds up to an entire DV tape).
There you have it. Please let me know if there's an easier way to accomplish exactly this (splitting one event clip into completely separate events). And let me know if this works/doesn't work for you. So long, suckaz.
_R.
Update: Wow. Actually, all you have to do is delete a frame or two during the clip, between the two parts you want to separate. And THEN you have to move the rejected clips to the trash. This will probably take awhile, because, that's right, it's doing destructive editing and splitting the clips in the finder FOR you. Then you can split a clip into a separate event with ease. This is what I get for posting so soon after figuring something out before investigating things further to see if there's a simpler way. Ridiculous. Anyway, there you go, friends! Let me know if any of this doesn't make sense.