Double-click the clip in the timeline.In the top right of the screen, click the Adjust button. The second button from the right, after the i, is the effect icon.Click the Effect icon to reveal windows showing the available audio and video effects in iMovie.
The audio effects function similarly. This feature showcases different effects and without time-consuming rendering. To add several effects to a clip or tweak the way an effect looks, export the project from iMovie to Final Cut Pro, where you can make more advanced edits. Or, if you’re willing to get a little bit complicated, add an effect to a clip and then export the clip. Then, re-import it to iMovie to add a new effect. Use Command+B to split the clip into pieces and add different effects to each piece.
Select the clip that has the effects in the timeline and copy it (Command+C).Select the other clips in your timeline. From the Edit drop-down menu, select Paste Adjustments.
Select what you want to copy from the first clip onto the others. Copy just one effect or all of the audio and visual adjustments that you’ve made. Some basic video transitions are always available while other theme-specific transitions depend on the theme of your project. When you add a transition between two clips, it blends the video and the audio of the two clips. If you add a transition at the beginning or end of your sequence, it blends the clip with a black screen. If you don’t want the sound to blend, detach the audio track from your clip before or after adding the transition. There are no audio transitions in iMovie, but to blend the sound between two clips, use the volume sliders to fade in and out detach the audio and overlap the ends of the clips. If your cursor is positioned between two clips when you add the transition, it will be added in that spot. If your cursor is in the middle of a clip, the transition will be added at the beginning and at the end of the clip.