Fade-In
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A fade-in is a gradual increase in audio level from silence or near-silence to the intended full volume. It is commonly used to make the start of music, dialogue, or sound effects feel smoother and less abrupt.
Quick facts:
Also called: audio fade-in, volume fade-in, gradual intro
Common uses: music starts, podcast intros, dialogue entry, smoother transitions
Main purpose: reduce abrupt starts
Not the same as: crossfade or fade-out.
Example:
A video opens with background music under a spoken introduction. Instead of starting the track at full volume instantly, the editor applies a short fade-in so the music enters more naturally and does not distract from the first spoken words.
Gotchas:
- A fade-in changes level over time, not the tone or EQ of the sound. Its main job is to control how audio begins, not how bright, warm, or clear it sounds.
- A fade-in that is too long can weaken the start of a track. Important musical impact, speech clarity, or timing cues may feel delayed or soft.
- A fade-in that is too short may not solve the problem. If the beginning still feels sudden, clipped, or distracting, the transition may need more adjustment.
- Fade-in is not the same as a crossfade. A fade-in raises one sound from silence, while a crossfade blends one sound out as another comes in.
FAQs
Related terms: Fade-Out • Audio Editing • Audio Export • Audio Effects • Background Music • Volume Automation • DAW

