Adjust the opacity of clips
By
default, clips on tracks appear at full (100%) opacity except for
areas marked by a clip’s mask, matte, or alpha channel. Make an
entire clip more transparent by setting an opacity value below 100%.
When a clip’s opacity value is set to less than 100%, clips on lower
tracks may be visible. At 0% opacity, the clip is completely transparent.
If no clips are stacked below a partially transparent clip, the
sequence’s black background becomes visible. You can set a selected
clip’s opacity in the Effect Controls panel or Timeline panel, and
you can fade a clip down or up over time by animating opacity.
Rendering
order affects how opacity interacts with visual effects. The Video Effects
list is rendered first, then geometric effects such as Motion are
rendered, and then alpha channel adjustments are applied. Within
each effects group, effects are rendered from the top down in the
list. Because Opacity is in the Fixed Effects list, it renders after
the Video Effects list. If you want opacity to render earlier or
later than certain effects, or if you want to control additional
opacity options, apply the Alpha Adjust video effect.

If you simply want to create a fade to black,
consider applying a transition such as Dip To Black to the clip
instead of animating opacity keyframes manually.
Specify clip opacity in the Effect Controls panel
You can adjust opacity for a clip in the Effect
Controls panel using the same method you would use to set any other
effect property. However, it may be simpler sometimes to adjust
these effects in a Timeline panel.
- Select a clip in a Timeline panel.
- In the Effect Controls panel, click the triangle next
to the Opacity effect to expand its settings.
- (Optional) If you’re animating the Opacity effect over
time, click the Toggle Animation icon
and
make sure the current‑time indicator is at the time you want in
the Effect Controls timeline.
- Do one of the following:
Enter a new opacity value.
Click the triangle next to the Toggle Animation
icon to expand the settings controls and drag the Opacity slider.
If
you click the Toggle Animation icon in step 3, a keyframe is created
in the Effect Controls timeline where the current‑time indicator
is positioned.
- (Optional) If you are animating the clip opacity over
time, move the current‑time indicator and do any of the following
to make an adjustment:
Enter a value for the setting.
Drag the Opacity slider to specify a value.
When
you make the adjustment, a new keyframe and a graph representing
the adjustment appear in the Effect Controls timeline. You can make
further adjustments by entering a value, dragging the Opacity slider,
or dragging an Opacity handle on the graph. You can also adjust
the interpolation between keyframes by editing the keyframe graph.
Repeat step 5 as needed.
Specify clip opacity in a Timeline panel
- Expand a track’s view, if necessary,
by clicking the triangle next to the track name to expand its options.
- If necessary, click the Show Keyframes button
, or
the Hide Keyframes button
, and
choose Show Opacity Handles from the pop‑up menu. A horizontal opacity
control rubber band appears in all the clips of the track. Note: If no keyframes exist on the track, the rubber band
appears as a straight horizontal line across the entire track.
- In a Timeline panel, do one of the following:
The opacity value and current time appear as a tool tip
as you drag.
- (Optional) If you’re animating the Opacity effect over
time, Ctrl-click (Windows) or Command-click (Mac OS) on the opacity
control rubber band with the Pen tool wherever you want to set an
opacity value. A keyframe is created where you clicked. Then drag
each keyframe up or down to set its value. For example, to fade
a clip in, create a keyframe at the beginning of the clip and another
a few seconds later. Drag the first down to the bottom of the clip
at 0 opacity. Drag the second up to 100%.

After you create one or more keyframes
on the graph, you can move the keyframes or Opacity handles with
either the Selection tool or the Pen tool. To adjust the smoothness
of the animation change the keyframe interpolation from linear to Bezier.