Navigating
Header
View Menu
The View menu controls the editor’s view settings.
Toolbar T
Show or hide the Toolbar.
Sidebar N
Show or hide the Sidebar.
Tool Settings
Show or hide the settings for the currently selected tool.
Adjust Last Operation
Displays a pop-up panel to alter properties of the last completed operation. See Adjust Last Operation.
Channels
Show or hide the Channel Region.
Preview as Backdrop
Display the current frame in the background.
Refresh All Ctrl-E
Reloads external files and refreshes the current frame preview. This is useful when you modified an external file or made a change in a scene that Blender didn’t detect.
Frame Selected NumpadPeriod
Zooms the display to show only the selected strips.
Frame All Home
Zooms the display to show all strips.
Frame Scene/Preview Range
Reset the horizontal view to the current scene frame range, taking the preview range into account if it is active.
Go to Current Frame Numpad0
Centers the horizontal timeline on the current frame.
Zoom to Border Shift-B
Click and drag to draw a rectangle and zoom to this rectangle.
Limit View to Contents
Prevents you from panning higher than the highest used channel.
Show Markers
Shows the marker region. When disabled, the Marker menu is also hidden and marker operators are not available in this editor.
Show Seconds Ctrl-T
Shows seconds instead of frames on the time axis.
Sync Visible Range
Synchronizes the horizontal panning and scale of the editor with other time-based editors that also have this option enabled. That way, they always show the same section of time.
Navigation
Play Animation Spacebar
Start or stop animation playback. This will start playback in all editors.
Go to Current Frame Numpad0
Scrolls the timeline so the current frame is in the center.
Jump to Previous Strip PageDown
Moves the playhead to the nearest strip border (start or end) that’s before the current frame.
Jump to Next Strip PageUp
Moves the playhead to the nearest strip border (start or end) that’s after the current frame.
Jump to Previous Strip (Center) Alt-PageDown
Moves the playhead to the nearest strip center that’s before the current frame.
Jump to Next Strip (Center) Alt-PageUp
Moves the playhead to the nearest strip center that’s after the current frame.
Range
Set Preview Range P
Interactively define the frame range used for preview playback/rendering.
As long as this range is active, playback will be limited to it, letting you repeatedly view a segment of the video without having to manually rewind each time. It also limits the range that gets rendered by Sequence Render Animation (see below).
Set Preview Range to Strips
Apply a preview range that encompasses the selected strips.
Clear Preview Range Alt-P
Clears the preview range.
Set Start Frame Ctrl-Home
Set the Start frame of the scene to the current frame.
Set End Frame Ctrl-End
Set the End frame of the scene to the current frame.
Set Frame Range to Strips
Set the Start and End frames of the scene so they encompass the selected strips.
Sequence Render Image
Show the current frame preview as a Render Result where you can save it as an image file.
Sequence Render Animation
Save previews of the frames in the scene range (or the preview range, if active) to a video file or a series of image files. See the Output panel for details.
Note
Sequence Render Image and Sequence Render Animation don’t render the final video by default – specifically, they don’t render Scene Strips, instead using the preview’s shading mode (which is initially Solid).
To output a video where the Scene Strips are rendered, use the Render menu in the top-bar, or change Sidebar ‣ View ‣ Scene Strip Display ‣ Shading to Rendered. The latter option is only available if the Video Sequencer is in the Preview or Sequencer & Preview mode.
Export Subtitles
Exports Text strips, which can act as subtitles, to a SubRip file (.srt
). The exported file contains all Text strips in the video sequence.
Toggle Sequencer/Preview Ctrl-Tab
Switch the editor mode between Sequencer and Preview.
Area
Area controls. See the user interface documentation for more information.
Marker Menu
Markers are used to denote frames with key points or significant events within an animation. Like with most animation editors, markers are shown at the bottom of the editor.
See Editing Markers for details.
Main View
Adjusting the View
Use these shortcuts to adjust the view:
Pan: MMB
Horizontal scroll: use Ctrl-Wheel, or drag the horizontal scrollbar.
Vertical scroll: use Shift-Wheel, or drag the vertical scrollbar.
Zoom: Wheel
Scale view: Ctrl-MMB and drag left/right (horizontal scale) or up/down (vertical scale). Alternatively, you can drag the circles on the scrollbars with LMB.
Playhead
The Playhead is the blue vertical line with the current time at the top. It can be moved in the following ways:
Jump or scrub: click or drag LMB in the scrubbing area at the top of the timeline.
Jump or scrub (alternative): click or drag Shift-RMB anywhere in the timeline. If you start dragging on a strip, that strip will be highlighted and displayed solo in the preview (all other strips are temporarily muted).
Move in single-frame increments: Left, Right, or Alt-Wheel.
Jump to the start or end frame of the scene (or preview range, if active): Shift-Left or Shift-Right.
While dragging with LMB or Shift-RMB, you can additionally hold Ctrl to snap to the start and end points of strips.
If scrubbing (or regular playback) performs poorly, you can speed it up by creating proxies.
Hint
The current frame is synchronized across all editors, so if you move the Playhead in the Timeline editor for example, it will move in the Video Sequence editor as well (and vice versa).