![]() If you manually adjust the effect, you can have a better effect. ![]() Usually, when you drag video clips to the Project, iMovie will set the fade-in and fade-out effect randomly by increasing the audio volume at the beginning of the clip and decrease the volume at the end of the clip. If you do not choose "Manual", that means you'd like iMovie to automatically set it for you. In the window, you can manually set the fade-in and fade-out length by dragging the slider bar to the right or left. If you don't know how to add background music to iMovie, you can refer to this post: add background music in iMovie. If there are two audio tracks, and you want to set the fade in and fade out in iMovie for the background music, you can double-click the background music clip to open the audio inspector. Open Your iMovie Project and Select a Clipĭouble-click the video clip, choose "Clip Adjustments" to open the Inspector, and then click the "Audio" tab. To fade audios in and out in iMovie with the audio inspector, you can follow these steps: Step 1. Related: How to Remove Background Noise from Video Method 2: Use the Audio Inspector to Apply Fade in/Fade Out Effect in iMovie If everything works OK, uncheck "Show Waveforms" to hide the waveforms. Move the playhead to the beginning part of the clips with fade effects to check the fade-in and fade-out effects. Then drag the small fade handle at the right of the clip to adjust the fade-out effect. ![]() Move the pointer over a waveform, and drag the small gray fade handle at the left of the clip to adjust the fade audio in effect. Green and purple waveforms indicate sounds and music you’ve added to your project. Note: The Blue waveforms indicate the sound recorded within your video clips. When the project opens, check "Show Waveforms" at the bottom of the Project window. ![]()
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