Lightworks export video8/12/2023 ![]() ![]() It can be a little tricky to find your way around, and for us the most confusing aspect was the transitions. You select an effect, drag it onto a clip, alter its parameters (including the ability to have them change over time thanks to keyframing), and you’re done. It’s powerful and easy (Image credit: Lightworks) ![]() This may not sound like a big deal until you realise that you increase the potential for mistakenly overwriting audio which you’d then have to source again, wasting a lot of precious time.įind an effect you like, drag it onto a clip and then alter its parameter. Moving a video clip to another layer will also not automatically move the audio to other layers, even though the audio and video are linked. Not so with Lightworks: put a video in V2, its audio goes to A1 and A2, thereby potentially overwriting any audio already there that belongs to a clip on V1. Were you to put a video on V2, its audio would automatically go to A3 and A4. ![]() In other editing software, adding a video on layer V1, would add the audio in layers A1 and A2 (for stereo sound). This is definitely something that needs practice to perfect.Īlthough you can work with multiple layers of audio and video, it’s not all sunshine and daffodils. Innovative though this is, it can get tricky, especially when working with multiple layers and multiple handles across multiple clips get automatically selected. If you highlight both the left and right handles of a clip, its position in the timeline and duration remains the same, but as you drag left or right, you move its in and out points in relation to the original clip, ie, you’re changing the part of the clip you’re using. You can then drag them left or right to alter the edit point, or the gap between two clips depending on what you selected. Select any of them by clicking on them - turning the handle yellow. The highlighted portion is either on the internal or external side of that end. Hover over clips and handles appear at either end of them - depending where the cursor is positioned. There are a few features that made us stand up and take notice (both good and bad), some of which we’d like to chat about here: You have multiple layers, can preview clips, set in and out points, the works. It's certainly closer to iMovie than any of the other NLE's out there.Titles are in the VFX workspace, and are fully customisable (Image credit: Lightworks) Editingīuilding an edit is pretty much as you’d expect from a professional level video editor. I haven't personally used it (I joined the many who jumped ship after Apple ditched the professional market) however they are making an effort to win back users and I've heard some good things about it. Download the trial and see if it meets your needs.įrom memory there is a "match source" option with both MPEG Streamclip and Adobe Media Encoder. Still you can convert almost anything and it does a pretty good job. Its geared towards the professional broadcast/ post production markets so expect to have a few goes at exporting your videos until you get it right.Īdobe Media Encoder is another great tool thats geared for 'prosumers' and the top end, but it's not free. The downside is it gives you really fine grained control of your output settings. MPEG Streamclip is a really great (free) converter which gives you fine grained control of your output settings. I'm sure lightworks would have some more advanced options but I've personally never used it. most consumers don't care about the tech details. Your output options are really limited with iMovie and thats the intention. I prefer a Mac solution, but if something else works, that is fine as well. I've installed Lightworks, haven't done much with it yet, and this is an option as well.Īnother solution would be to use Ubuntu, and I know there are some other (free) video editors out there that might do the job. If I need to upgrade iMovie for this, that's OK. ![]() I would like to know how I can set these dimensions to the same value as the source? I won't limit my question to iMovie or iMovie 09. I want to combine several of these movies and then export them at the same dimension. The biggest limit is that the movie dimensions are 640x240 pixels. It can make a 400fps movie for five seconds. One example is that my camera (Nikon 1) has a slow motion option. Using bigger dimensions or black borders is not a great solution either. I want to import and export them in the same dimensions to limit the loss of details. Now and then I get movies that are not in standard dimensions. I use iMovie 9 for simple stuff like combining videos made with my photo camera and phone. ![]()
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