Have you tried making the entire 'source sequence' a subclip? I don't know if that would work, but it's worth trying. When you match to something that came from a subclip, you get the subclip first. Not at the machine-
Let us know if that works. Group clip by pinpoint would work, but the clips would be 'stacked,' instead of in a line, if you can get used to that.
Greg (at) secrethq.com
Greg Huson
Secret Headquarters, Inc
www.DigitalServiceStation.com
www.SecretHQ.com
iPhone
On Sep 14, 2011, at 6:15 AM, Christian Foerster <public@braintrash.de> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> as file-based cameras create a new clip every time the operator hits
> record, I usually put several clips that belong to the same situation
> in a sequence to edit from.
>
> Now when I hit Match Frame in my master sequence, it matches back to
> the clip, not to my neatly organized footage sequence. I could load my
> footage sequence into the composer and reverse match frame back to it,
> but that's not practical. This pretty much renders Match Frame useless
> (the way I use it anyway).
>
> So.... any way around that? Basically what I would like to do is
> create a new master clip from several master clips. Can't be done,
> right? Any workarounds? How do you guys deal with that problem?
>
> Bye,
> Christian
>
> --
> http://www.filmeschneider.de
> http://www.avidscreencast.com
>
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