8 Essentiële Snedes die Elke Editor Moet Kennen
De 8 fundamentele snijtypes met filmvoorbeelden.

8 Essential Cuts Every Editor Should Know
These 8 essential cuts will help any editor transform their footage into a gripping, solid narrative.
If your goal is to master the art of editing, you're going to need to know the essential cuts to use when editing a film or video. Let's go through eight of these and look at some examples of each.
1. The Standard
The hard cut is the basic type of cut in editing. This type of cut is utilized when you want to cut from clip to clip without any type of transition or where you cut from the end of one clip to the beginning of another. The only downside of the hard cut is that (out of all the cuts we'll talk about) this one gives the least amount of visual meaning.
2. Jump Cut
The jump cut is a technique that allows the editor to jump forward in time. We see an early version of this technique in Eisenstein's Battleship Potemkin, where the battleship fires a mortar round, and we watch the destruction as various angles jump cut from one to another. It gained traction and is one of the most used types of cuts today next to the hard cut.
Another great place to use jump cuts is during an interview, especially if you film the interview with multiple cameras. This allows you to jump from one angle to the other without it being jarring for the audience.
3. L Cut & J Cut
First, let's talk about the L Cut. This editing technique is used not only by narrative filmmakers but is also a favorite of documentary filmmakers and commercial videographers. What L Cut means is that you are hearing the audio from the previous shot, even though we've moved on to another shot. So, the audience is looking at clip B but still hearing audio from clip A.
A J Cut is essentially the opposite of the L Cut. Here we hear the audio before we see the video. So, the audience is looking at clip A but still hearing audio from clip B.
4. Cutting on Action
The technique of cutting on action is a huge component of action films. The basic idea of