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Audio post production pro tools shortcuts
Audio post production pro tools shortcuts











audio post production pro tools shortcuts

AUDIO POST PRODUCTION PRO TOOLS SHORTCUTS WINDOWS

One annoyance is that if both ends of the event have fades and you open the editor, you get two separate windows that sit on top of each other, so you have to pay attention to which is which, and then close both. remembering 5 different mouse gestures, especially since I work across a lot of different apps and suffer keyboard shortcut overload regularly. I have mapped the fade editor to F9 which pops up the fade editor if I want to adjust a shape, which is fine. With one mapped controller key I can see a detailed view of the waveform for precision editing and can check deep into the handles and audition parts. One thing that will make up for fades and then some is the sample editor at the bottom. And I came from ProTools a long time ago. I do dialog editing on Nuendo and it’s certainly workable. Sometimes it’s better to not search for the equivalent, but starting from a blank slate and figuring out a workflow that meets your needs. It’s always hard coming from another tool and expecting certain conveniences to exist in similar ways. One useful thing is going into the keyboard shortcut editor and searching on ‘Fade’ to see them all, and then decide which ones you might want to map. There are quite a few fade related functions in Nuendo, some of which are not mapped to keyboard shortcuts. I like to do that when doing crossfades because you see the overlapping area, and you just have to press X while having one of the events selected.Īnd the last thing I want to add: If you struggle to find Nuendo tutorials/solutions to your problems, make sure you also look for Cubase content, because there are a lot more Cubase than Nuendo users out there.

audio post production pro tools shortcuts

You can still Shift+Drag Events on top of each other and maintain the normal overlap behavior, if you want to. So I tend to activate “Editing - Delete overlaps” in the Preferences when doing Dialogue Editing by pressing a key command. If I want to delete the Fades I press option/alt F.Ĭoming from ProTools, the way Nuendo handles overlaps can be confusing too. Then Enter/return to close the Fade editor. If you tend to use one type of Fade most of the time, you can set that type of fade as a default). Then X again to open the Fade editor (in case I want to edit the curve of the crossfade. When I want to crossfade I select the range above the two events and press X. That works quite well for me when doing fades on a single events. I set the D/F/G Keys to “Fade in to range start”/“Adjust fades to range”/“Fade out from range end”.













Audio post production pro tools shortcuts