![]() See in the image below how the audio track from the highlighted clip now overlaps the following clip. This allows you to having overlapping audio. Now if you tap and hold the edge of the video part, you can move it independently of the audio. This makes the audio track of a clip drop down as a separate item. If you tap and hold on a clip, you get an option to “expand audio”. The next function I discovered is a pretty essential editing tool, which isn’t always available in editing apps. There’s filters to “reduce noise” and “reduce echo” plus “enhance speech”. There are check boxes to select if you want to use “Auto Volume” or “Balance Sound”. The audio button brings up audio controls for the selected clip. Externally created presets aren’t supported yet, but they are planned for the future. There’s 11 presets loaded with the app on installation. You can also adjust the intensity of the filter, plus the exposure of the clip, contrast and more. If you like the look but find it too strong you can tone it down. Rush allows you to have some control over the filter, too. The color button brings up a list of preset filters to apply, in the way we are all used to on social media. You can adjust position, rotation by individual degrees, opacity, crop the image on any edge or add a feather. You can add basic titles and transitions, which can be custom edited pretty easily, change font size and so on.ĭouble-clicking a clip brings up a list of edit options along the bottom, which can again be scrolled left and right to reveal more. The button to the right of the 3 bars switches the format from landscape to portrait – handy for Instagram and Facebook stories – or square. Meanwhile, the row of icons along the bottom can be scrolled along left to right with your finger to reveal more functions. The blue circle with the cross allows you to add more media. Then clicking on that icon with 3 bars brings up the track controls, which anyone who use Premiere Pro will recognise the look of. Note that clips, photos, and audio can be added from local storage, a linked Dropbox account, or your Creative Cloud account.ĭragging a clip upwards creates a new video track and allows you to drop the clip onto it. These are clips from our Shoot Fast smartphone filmmaking workshop at the last festival in Zürich. Now I’m going through the app with my own footage. Trim, rearrange clips, add titles, add transitions and export or share the final video. Perhaps this footage is what causes the large download size?Īfter you select at least 3 clips from these test videos (of a trip to a beautiful island somewhere), you are taken through the basic functions of the editing part of the app. If you choose not to skip the tutorial, you are asked to choose some test footage supplied by Adobe. Once installed, the app offers to take you through quickly through the basics. The app is large – over 400mb need to be downloaded. As someone who already has a Adobe Creative Cloud subscription, there’s no extra cost to me to download and use the app.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |