The text is impossible to read, the background isn’t transparent, the green leafy twirls are essentially invisible, and the text does not honor Safe Zones.Īgain, right-click on the title in the Titles Browser and Open a Copy in Motion. The default setting (60 in this case) is the setting for this parameter in Motion when you saved the clip. Now, when you apply this title in Final Cut to a clip in the timeline and select the clip, a new setting – Opacity – appears in the Title Animation Inspector. Since you are working with a copy, you are generally fine selecting Save the Original. If you Save the Duplicate, it creates a duplicate of the copy and saves it using the name and location you specify. NOTE: If you choose Save the Original, which I generally recommend, this updates the copy in the Titles Browser. This allows Final Cut to control the Opacity setting, as you’ll see shortly. More importantly, right-click the arrow to the right of Opacity (red arrow) and select Publish. Go to Inspector > Properties and change the Opacity to something less dense.
In Motion, select the Background group, this contains the solid color background. (While you can change the size and font in Final Cut, you can’t change the position.) For this example, I’ll bring the text lower to match the Safe Zones. In Motion, you can adjust the size, position and default font for the text. This makes a copy of the title and opens the copy in Motion. While we can adjust font choice, color and size, we can’t change the position of the text to decrease vertical line spacing, better fit within Safe Zones or make the background more transparent.Ĭontrol-click the title in the Titles Browser (not the timeline) and choose Open a Copy in Motion. With the text clip selected in the Timeline, go to Inspector > Text Animation (red arrow). The text does not respect Safe Zones (indicated by the faint yellow lines) and the opacity of the background can’t be adjusted. But there is far more that we can do. Let me give you three examples. You are probably familiar with how to modify and adjust text in the Inspector. There are ways to adjust titles in Final Cut that provide far more than you might expect. It is easy to look at many of them and decide to write the whole collection off as useless. However, what you see is not necessarily what you can get. They ignore Safe Zones, the font choices are clunky, text is hard to read, or the backgrounds can’t be adjusted. Many of the titles shipped with Apple Final Cut Pro are pretty, um, suboptimal.