Monday, February 17, 2014

Question about video editing software?




Joe Murphe


is there any video editing software for free or under $100 that had blood, explosions, and muzzles flashes.


Answer
You may try this Video Editor, it's a nice video editing software that can help you edit, join, split, trim, crop, convert and cut video, my friends recommend it to me, it's easy to use and works pretty well for me, it embeds many special effects, you can even put a video inside a video. I had made a video with it and the video got award, that's pretty cool. Here is the free download link.
http://www.avs4you.com/AVS-Video-Editor.aspx?sct=aff&ct=regnow&cid=94464

For more video editing software alternatives, you may refer to this video editor review
http://video-editor.reviewstown.com/video-editor-review.html
Hope it helps. Contact me if you have any other question.

Video editing software - two questions?




Artista


Hi everyone,
I am looking for some video editing software that will allow me to paste an image within the frame that will hook onto a moving object and follow it. Probably not explaining myself very well but hopefully you know what I mean! Basically Photoshopping a moving image. Could anyone recommend some basic software I can download that will allow me to do this? Preferably not too expensive!
Also, I have started to make a film using two cameras, and later realised that one was filming in widescreen and the other was not! Is there any way to alter the screen size after filming so that I can edit the shots together properly??
Thanks in advance to anyone who can help!



Answer
The first one is challenging... but possible with highter-end video editors like Final Cut (Macintosh) or Adobe Premiere or Sony Vegas. The difficulty will be how "seamless" you need the "attachment" to be, how patient you are editing and how steady the video shot is that the still is being layed into.

For the 4:3 and 16:9 "melding"... you have a choice to make. In either case, it will require some cropping and/or digital zooming to make it work.

1) With the video editor's "cropping" function, cut the widescreen version to 4:3 format. Depending on the shot, this may also include "panning and scanning" to be sure the video elements capture in wide screen fit to the 4:3 window.

2) With the video editors digital zoom function, increase the size of the 4:3 image so it fits the 16:9 windows format. There will also be some "pan and scan" work to be sure the height and width captures the video elements you need in the 16:9 window.

Most low-end, bundled, free, video editors cannot do this. Again, editors like Final Cut, Adobe Premiere or Sony Vegas... among others... can.




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