Short-form editing trends
Seamless transition
What is Seamless transition?
A seamless transition is a motion-based effect, such as a whip pan or cross dissolve, that bridges two clips so the cut between them is hard to spot. It moves between scenes with enough visual continuity that the viewer’s attention stays on the content.
When you'd use it
- 1When two clips share a directional motion you can use to carry the viewer across the cut.
- 2When a whip pan or passing object gives you an element to hide the join behind.
- 3When the brand aesthetic calls for polished, fluid storytelling with no jarring cuts.
- 4When a montage needs continuity of motion to hold together as a whole.
Example
A beauty creator whips the camera hard to the right to reveal a blank wall at the end of one shot, then starts the next clip with a matching wall-to-subject whip in the same direction. At full speed the two clips read as one fluid camera movement across a location change.
Use cases
- 1Using a whip pan at the end of one shot and matching it to a whip pan at the start of the next.
- 2Masking a cut behind a passing object in the foreground so the scene change is imperceptible.
- 3Dissolving between two clips at a matched point in the action so the flow reads as a single take.
Make on-brand short-form video from the footage you already have.
