

Master your iPhone in one minute a day: Sign up here to get our FREE Tip of the Day delivered right to your inbox. You can either select: videos, Photos, or use your video camera that is built in. Your iPhone saves the audio, so you can simply repeat this process, turning the audio on instead of off. Click on the Storyboard image to select the video clip you want to use or edit. Select a clip of video and press the delete key. If you later decide you'd like to get the audio back, never fear. To reduce the file size of a project remove unused/unwanted footage by deleting it. Your video should now be mute, and you should see a grayed-out speaker icon at the bottom of your screen.Tap the yellow speaker icon in the top-left corner.Hold Control and click and choose Delete. Select the video you'd like to remove sound from. Right-click and choose Delete from the shortcut menu.To learn more about shooting and editing videos with your iPhone, sign up for our Tip of the Day newsletter, and if you need help sending videos, check out our guide on how to send large files. What I am confused about is how you added clips to the timeline without clip connections, I cannot find a way to add clips above the primary storyline without automatic clip connections.Important: If you're hoping to use this audio-free footage for B-roll in a film or music video, removing audio this way will completely remove the audio track from the clip. That means when you export the video to iMovie or another app, the audio will not be available. I see a tiny blue line, I suspect that is the problem, something is not right, my suggestion would be to NOT use the primary storyline, as you have to connect the clips to something, and the 1st video clip is connected to something, that has to be the primary storyline, FCPX only connects clips to the primary storyline.

Let me rethink your answer, I suspect the video clips are NOT in the primary storyline, the evidence is the clip connection, clips in the primary storyline do not have clip connections. When I put my 60fps clips into iMovie (Im sure theyre 60fps, as shown in the movie inspector), it comes out as 30fps, and Im not entirely sure why. Displayed in the folder will be the clips associated with the project.

A folder will pop up entitled Original Media. Select a clip in the pane and do File/Reveal in Finder.

The clips associated with that project will appear in the media browser pane. You’ll then see the audio from that clip appear as its own clip in green below. You can also select Modify > Detach Audio from the menu bar. 3) Choose Detach Audio in the shortcut menu. 2) Right-click or hold Control and click the clip. That was before I thought I had the answer, then I had a rethink. Open a project and click on the project's title under Project Media at the top of the sidebar. 1) Select the clip in your movie Timeline that contains the video and audio. Ah, mystery solved, the clips are in the primary storyline, solution lift up from primary storyline, in essence creating a 2nd storyline above, the primary storyline is a giant gap clip.
