Trimming lets you adjust where a clip starts and ends without deleting any audio. The original audio is preserved—you're just changing what portion plays. This is non-destructive editing.
Trim Handles
Every clip has trim handles on its left and right edges:
- Left handle — Adjusts where the clip starts playing
- Right handle — Adjusts where the clip stops playing
How to Trim
-
Hover over a clip edge
Move your cursor to the left or right edge of a clip. The cursor changes to a trim cursor (bracket shape). -
Click and drag
Drag inward to shorten the clip, or outward to reveal more audio (if available). -
Release
The clip is now trimmed. Play it back to hear the result.
Non-destructive: Trimming doesn't delete audio. You can always drag the edges back out to restore the original length.
Trimming the Start
Trim the left edge to:
- Remove silence or noise at the beginning
- Start the clip on a specific beat
- Cut out unwanted intro material
Trimming the End
Trim the right edge to:
- Remove trailing silence or reverb tails
- End the clip on a specific beat
- Prevent overlap with the next clip
Snap to Grid
By default, trim edges snap to the grid for precise alignment with beats:
- Grid snap ON — Edges align to beat divisions
- Hold Alt/Option — Temporarily disable snap for fine control
Zooming for Precision
For precise trims, zoom in first:
- Use Cmd/Ctrl + scroll wheel to zoom
- Or use the zoom slider in the timeline
- Zoom in close to see individual waveform details
- Make your trim adjustment
- Zoom back out to see the full arrangement
Trimming Recordings
After recording, you'll often want to trim:
- Start — Remove the count-in or breath before singing
- End — Remove silence after the performance ends
Tip: When trimming vocals, leave a tiny bit of silence at the start to avoid cutting off the initial consonant. Same at the end—don't cut off reverb tails.
Trimming vs. Splitting
Know when to use each:
- Trimming — Adjust the edges of a clip. Use when you want to shorten from the beginning or end.
- Splitting — Cut a clip into two pieces. Use when you want to remove a section from the middle or rearrange parts.
Crossfades
When two clips meet on the same track, FlowState automatically adds a small crossfade to prevent clicks:
- The crossfade is automatic and subtle
- Adjust clip positions if you hear unwanted artifacts
Restoring Trimmed Audio
If you trim too much:
- Hover over the trimmed edge
- Drag outward to reveal the hidden audio
- The original audio is still there
Common Trimming Tasks
Tight Drum Loops
For drum loops, trim precisely to the beat:
- Zoom in on the loop start
- Trim the left edge to start exactly on the first kick
- Trim the right edge to end exactly before where the loop would repeat
Vocal Phrases
For vocal clips:
- Trim the start just before the first word
- Leave a small buffer (don't cut into the consonant)
- Trim the end after the last word plus reverb tail
One-Shots
For single hits (kicks, snares, etc.):
- Trim the start to the transient (the initial attack)
- Trim the end where the sound naturally fades
Keyboard Shortcuts
| Cmd/Ctrl+E | Split clip at playhead |
| Alt/Option + drag | Disable grid snap while trimming |
| Cmd/Ctrl+Z | Undo trim |