Time Overlay guide

Add a transparent Time Overlay countdown in Final Cut Pro

Final Cut Pro handles PNG image sequences as native alpha media. WebM playback inside Final Cut has historically been inconsistent on macOS, so the recommended path on the Mac side is PNG sequence — quality is master-grade and alpha is unambiguous.

Recommended Time Overlay export: PNG sequence is the dependable path on macOS.

Step 01

Export the overlay

In Time Overlay, pick a duration that aligns to your edit beat and a style preset that fits your project. Export 'PNG Sequence' from the export panel.

Step 02

Import into Final Cut Pro

File → Import → Media → select the first frame and let Final Cut auto-detect the image sequence. The overlay arrives as a single clip with the transparency preserved.

Step 03

Stack above the primary storyline

Drop the overlay on a connected layer above your base footage. The countdown shows transparent over the shot below with no further setup.

Step 04

Resize and align

Use the Transform controls to scale and reposition. Final Cut respects alpha across Color and Compressor delivery, so you can encode for delivery without losing transparency.

Time Overlay tips

If you want a true ProRes 4444 master with alpha, unzip the Time Overlay PNG sequence export and run the bundled `convert-to-prores.sh` script. Final Cut imports ProRes 4444 natively as transparent media.

Systemleiste

Öffentlicher Status

Identität

Time Overlay

Overlay-Timer-Tools für Creator, die gut lesbare Countdowns in Aufnahmen und Livestreams brauchen.

Produkt

Eine Local-First-Toolseite für Countdown-Overlays, kompaktes FAQ und Hinweise zu Exportformaten.