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workshop-video-editing-basics/docs/slides/20-continuity.md
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Continuity Editing

Make each cut feel like uninterrupted time & space. The audience should forget the camera exists.

Note: Reinforce that continuity is about psychological comfort; when it's invisible the viewer stays focused on story, not technique.

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Continuity Editing

1. Match on Action

A cut during continuous physical movement (e.g., a door opening) hides the edit.

  • Cut at peak motion so momentum sells the splice.
  • Action should overlap a few frames across both shots for seamless flow.

Note: Demonstrate with a twocamera sample: actor sits, use a clap for sync and cut midsit.

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Continuity Editing

2. Eyeline Match

Maintain where a subject looks so the viewer can orient spatial relationships.

  • ShotA: interviewer asks, eyes ~10° left of lens.
  • ShotB: guest answers, eyes ~10° right of lens.

Note: Ask the class what happens if we flip shotB horizontally; show the resulting confusion.

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Continuity Editing

3. Screen Direction

Keep lefttoright (↔) travel consistent unless you show an explicit reversal.

  • Insert a neutral axis shot before reversing direction.
  • Works in tandem with the 180degree rule to anchor geography.

Note: Draw arrows on the whiteboard; relate to driving footage where the car suddenly appears to go backwards if screen direction flips.

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Continuity Editing

Continuity Checklist

Area Watch For
Action Movement overlap, no jump stutter
Eyeline Correct sightlines across axis
Direction Consistent L↔R travel
Props & Wardrobe No sudden changes
Lighting No timeofday jumps

Note: Encourage participants to toggle clip visibility in Kdenlive and watch each cut backtoback before exporting the final cut.