Transcripts
1. Introduction - Kdenlive Basics: M. Hi, and welcome.
My name is Jonathan. I work as a motion
designer and animator. I'm the founder of NuxTux Creative Studio over on YouTube, where I upload tutorials
and animated shorts. This is a beginner framing class that will teach you everything
you need to know to start editing your videos and gain a solid understanding
of KD and Live enough for you to
continue learning about video editing from
other professionals, even though they're
not using KD and Live. Because once you understand
the principles of what you're doing and how
your software works, then it becomes easier to follow along with
other tutorials, whether it be for premiere,
Final Cut, et cetera. Throughout this class,
you'll learn how to edit a video from
start to finish. We'll be covering
all the basic tools. You'll learn how to add effects, transitions, how to change
the speed of your videos. We'll be covering masking, green screen, audio
mixing, and much more. So I'm here to answer any questions on
the subject matter and clarify any doubts. Again, my name is Jonathan. Welcome to this
basic editing with Caden Live. Let's get started.
2. Before We Start - Kdenlive Basics: Hi. Before we get started, let's make sure that
we're on the same page, starting with the version of KD and Live that
we'll be running. I recommend using
the latest version, as it includes new features needed to follow along
with some lessons. Although any older
version of KD and Live will allow you to
follow along just fine. Then we have the
class resources, which includes all the
assets that we'll be using throughout this
class and that you can use to follow along. They're available down in the project resources or in the about section
of this class. For those of you coming
in from Premiere, Kaden Live allows you to set its keyboard shortcuts
to that of premieres. You can check the system
requirements for Kaden Live and see how they match up against
the specs of your machine. The minimum requirements
will usually do just fine. And throughout this class,
you'll learn techniques to lower the load that KD and
Live takes on your machine. Keep in mind that the project does not start in the program. You're usually
starting with an idea, a request from a client
or a project brief. This class, our
project consists of creating an ad for a
fictional coffee brand. We already have all our assets, and the idea is
already in place. Once we have our idea and our
assets, we can get started. And just a reminder, you can control the playback
speed whether to accelerate or slow down these lessons to
your convenience. All right. Without
any further ado, let's jump right into it.
3. Folder Structure - Kdenlive Basics: Hi. Before we get started with editing or footage
inside of Kaden Live, as we've mentioned in the intro, your project starts before
you enter the program, and part of that is
assembling our assets. So we're going to
take a quick look at our file structure, and then we can jump
into Kaden Live. If you've downloaded and you've extracted the project folder, you'll have basic editing,
as I have it over here. Let's go inside. In here, we have three folders. So we have the assets, the project files,
and our renders. Now inside of the assets, I've broken it down into
some more subfolders, just to keep things
organized and give a roadmap ifever
you would like to adopt it or modify
it for yourself. But in here we have our video, audio, and our images. In your case, you will not
have the image sequences. This is for a demonstration
later in the class. I've also broken down the
videos into A row and B row, and for the audio, we have music, sound effects, voiceover. And finally, for images, we have graphics and photos. Now, image sequence, we just
have a sequence of images. Next, we have the project files. So in here, I have a
folder for KD and Live, and that is because we will
be working with KD and Live. And if ever you're working with any photo manipulation for project or maybe
working with vectors, you could create folders for the software that you're
using for these tasks. All right. And in
here, of course, we have different versions
of the project, okay? And finally, we
have the renders. You can create sub directories
to keep things organized or simply use a naming
system that works for you. Alright. So that is it
for the folder structure. And the next lesson, we're going to start and create our project, import our media,
and learn a bit about the interface.
See you there.
4. Create New Project - Kdenlive Basics: Hi. So, this first lesson, we'll get started
with Caden Live. So the first thing we'll do
is go ahead and start it up. So in my case, I'll go in the Start menu and open up Kaden Live after
typing the name. If this is your first time
opening up Kaden Live, this is what you should
have in front of you. If not, we can all
have the same layout. Simply go up to the right corner over here on your Caden Live. And at the top, you
should have login, editing, audio
effects and color. Simply click on editing, and it should reset your
layout to look just like mine. So I'll click on
this bar over here. Left click hold and drag
down to scale M layout. So this is what we
have for Kid in Live. Now, if your color scheme
is not the same as mine, and you would like to
change your color scheme, simply go up to your menu bar, go inside of settings, down to color scheme, and pick which every one
works best for you. Now that we've gotten
this out of the way, let's go ahead and get started. The first thing we'll do is
create a new project and set the parameters that we
want for the output video. So I'll go up to File and the
menu bar, go down to New. We'll get a little
pop up over here. And inside of it, we have a few options and a
few tabs as well. So we have the settings. So that would be
the main window, proxy, guides, metadata. You can add the metadata right here and add segments over here, and this is optional if
you want to export it or not when exporting
your final project. So over here in the
settings tab is where we would pick our resolution
in our frame rate. At the top here, we have
project folder, and by default, Kit and Live would
save any cache for your project inside of the
default cache location. You can choose to save it in the parent folder of
the project file, meaning where we
save our project, it will move the case
file over there. Or you can choose
a custom location. Now, right under that
is where we're going to choose our resolution
and frame rate. So you can see we have
different folders with different resolutions each, and inside of them, we have
different frame rates. Now, I already know that we're going to be working
with ten ADP, 24 frames per second. And we have these
filters up here, and we have the FPS over here, so frames per second,
and we're going to go down to 24 and filter it out. And since we're
working at ten ADP, we'll simply go to the
ten ADP folder and grab the HD ten ADP 24
frames per second. Have some more
information down here, but we'll look into it later.
You can leave it as it is. So two video tracks, two audio tracks, two channels, so stereo for your
audio channels, leave the thumbnail for
video and audio checked on. And as for the timeline preview, yours should be
set to automatic. You can leave it
on that for now. Unless you are used to Kan Live, then, of course,
do, as you know. So once we're done here, we've selected ten
ADP 24 frames, press Okay, and
there we have it. Our project is now ten ADP,
24 frames per seconds. Next, we'll simply
save our project. So let's go up to File, Save as. I'll navigate over to
the project folder, and inside of 02 project files. I'll go inside of Kaden Live. I'll click on V
one since this is the first edit that
you have access to, and I'll change
the name down here to V two. So version number two. It'll simply click on Save. You can rename it to
whatever you want. Now, once we've
saved our project in a new location or
its first location, we get a little
pop up over here, and this lets us know that it's moving the cache file from the default location over to the new location that
we've saved our project. So simply press Continue,
and there you have it. So we've set the profile that
we want in the frame rate, and we've saved our project.
5. Create Vertical Profile - Kdenlive Basics: In this lesson,
I'll be showing you how you can create
a vertical project. So we'll start by
going up to File New. I'll start by removing the filter here for
the frame rate, so we can see our custom
folder down here. Now, any new profile that we create will be save
inside of custom. So I'll activate
the filter again. Now, choose the frame
ate that you would like your project to be.
I'll go with 24. And the vertical is simply
the ten ADP flip 90 degrees. So I'll choose the
ten ADP 24 here. Then I'll click on
this button up here. Which will open this pop up. Next, simply click on
the Plus over here. You can also choose the
presets from this menu, but we've already chosen
the ten ADP 24 frames. Press T plus, and now we get the ability to
modify this new profile, so it creates a copy of it. So over here, we can
say HD ten ADP 24. Vertical. Next, when it
comes to the size over here, simply flip these values. So it would be 1080 over
here and 1920 over here. As for the aspect ratio, you can also invert
these values over here. The rest can stay as it is. You can also choose
your color space and the scanning over here. Once you're done, simply
go up here to this disc, press Save profile,
close out of it. Now inside of custom, we now have HD ten
ADP 24 FPS vertical. Select it, choose the amount
of tracks that you want, where you want to save
the cache, your metadata, et cetera, everything
you would normally do, and press Okay. We now have a vertical layout. And now, if you want it, we
could simply import a clip. We get the pop up for the
resolution in the frame rate not matching or simply
cancel, and there we have it. So later in the
course, we'll learn how we can add an effect to this to sket it up so it
fits within our frame. All right. All right, so that is it for this lesson.
6. Import Media - Kdenlive Basics: Hi. In this lesson, we'll learn how to import
our media inside of KT&LV. So let's go ahead
and get started. There are several
ways of importing your media into KD and Live, but they really boil down
to two separate methods. One is using the file
browser or file manager, and the other one is
to drag and drop. So let's start with
the file manager. There are several ways of
accessing your file manager, and the first one
could be simply to double click over the
project bin over here, simply double click, and it
will open a file manager. In here, you can simply select the folder
you want to import, click on O and
import it or import multiple folders at once
or individual media. So what we're going to
do is left click on the video file or
the video folder. Inside of it, you'll
notice we have A row, which has media and B role
which is an empty folder. Let's click on 01 Video,
and let's click on Okay. We've imported our video. We get this little
pop up here at the bottom, and all this does, it lets us know that the
media that we've imported has a different
resolution as well as frame rate than that of the project profile that
we're working with. CDN Live offers the option to switch to the media
profile, but in this case, we'll click on
Kensl as we intend to export in ten ADP
24 frames per second. All right, so let's open up
the video folder over here. We can see we have
the AR folder. Now, very quickly, I'll address the sequences folder over here. We can ignore this for now. We'll look at it
later in the course. You cannot delete it as well. Just leave it there, and
we'll get into it later. Right. So back to
the video folder. Notice we have the A row folder inside of it, but not the B row. That is because the
BR folder was empty. Kaden Live imports it with the entire subfolder structure. Another way of accessing
the file manager, is to click on this little icon above here in the project bin. And if you left click on it, it opens up the file manager. Same thing, really. Just a different button
that you click on. Now, this time, we're going
to import the audio folder. Notice it has subfolders
and they have content. So we're going to
click on 02 Audio before we do that, I'll
cancel out of this. And I'll make sure to
click on empty space here. If you have anything selected, say this folder over here, when you import,
it's going to import your new folder inside
of this selected folder. So make sure to click
on empty space, go back inside of here.
Left click on audio. You can see it has a
subfolder structure. But this time, I'm going to go down here and I'm going to check on Ignore subfolder
structure. Press on Okay. It imports our audio. If I open up the audio, notice that the sub folder
structure was ignored. And this is exactly
what it does. It combines your media and
ignores all the other folders. So if you prefer to
import with this method, you can go ahead and
use that method. Now, finally, we're going
to use the drag and drop. Let's go to our assets folder. We're going to grab 03 images. Left click, hold, drag and drop it over the project bin,
and there we have it. It has imported our images. But notice the file
structure was ignored. The reason for this is simply the last settings that you use inside of the file manager, specifically the Ignore
subfolder structure over here, these settings are going to be applied next time that
you drag and drop. So if you want it to not ignore the subfolder structure
when dragging and dropping, simply left click
uncheck this box. You have to import
something at least once. If you press Cancel, it
will ignore this change. That is if you have it
checked on right now, and we can import
the image sequence. Before we do so,
let's go ahead and check on Import image sequence. Let's just grab this
04. Press Okay. Now, if we go inside of it, notice we have a bunch
of individual images, and that is not how you would import an image sequence
inside of Cat and Live. So instead, I'll go ahead and delete the sequence
over here, Delete. And let's go inside
of our file manager. Double kick. Let's go
inside of sequence. And this time, we're going to check on Import image sequence. Okay? Simply going
to leftClick on the first frame over here
and then press Okay. And now Kaden Live
will import this as an image sequence and
not as individual images. I don't know if
you can see this. There's a butterfly over
here on the screen, so it is now a sequence. So I'll delete this. I'll
delete this over here. Okay, so we have
our media imported, and now you know the different ways of importing your media. You can also create
folders up here, so create a folder. Name
it however you want. To move things in
and out of folders, it's very easy simply left click hold drag, put it back in. Left, hold, click drag. So that is how we would
import our media. Finally, over on this
top button over here, if we left click on the
little arrow over here, we get these other options, and these are the different
sort of media and assets that we can import or create inside of
our project bin. So you can make solid colors. We can create title clips, which we'll be
learning later on, et cetera, and you even
have online resources. All of this is also
available inside of the project menu in your menu. Okay. So that is it for importing our media
inside of Caden Live. And the next lesson
we'll be taking a look at the interface, a quick look, and then we'll
jump right into editing our media over here.
Alright, see you there.
7. The Interface - Kdenlive Basics: Hi, and welcome to this very brief lesson
on the interface. We're going to take a
very quick look at it and then jump right into
editing our footage. Over here on the top left, we have what is known as or what you could call the
project panel. Essentially, this
is just a segment on our interface that
holds different tabs. Cycle through these tabs. You can rearrange the tabs. You can even detach
them and put them in new segments or group
them with other windows. I'll just hover over this, let go and push it back here. Right. So you have
these different tabs. Clip properties is referring
to your clips over here. So if we were to grab
one of these clips, clip properties, and we get
some information on the clip. Alright. Now, over here,
as you can notice, we're getting a preview of the clip inside of
our project bin. This is the view monitor. It allows you to preview the media that you have
inside of your project bin. So whether it be audio, images, videos, image sequences, et cetera, you can
preview all of that inside of the view monitor. You also get a little
timeline scrubby thing down here so you can scrub through your media and do some other cool things like,
we'll look into that later. So next to it, we have what is known
as the Project monitor. Now, the project monitor allows you to view what
is on the timeline. The timeline is down here. It is this that holds our video tracks and
our audio tracks. We have a few basic
tools above it, few options over here. We'll be looking into
all of that later. So you have your v1v2. Video one, Video
two, we have A one, A two, Audio one, Audio two. And then finally, over
here on the right, we have our audio mixer and our effects
composition stack. For the audio mixer, you can
toggle the view of it on and off above our timeline over here next to what looks
like a little play button. You have this little menu, this toggle simply left click, it will hide the audio mixer. Left click again,
it will show it. And then finally, we
have these options up here or rather these layouts, these pre built layouts
up here to the top right, this login so we can grab media and import
it into our project. We have editing audio. The color over here gives you the vectorscope, the histogram. So let's go back to editing. I'll track this down a
little bit, and there we go. We can also create new layouts, but we'll look into that later. So that is it for the interface. And the next lesson,
we are going to learn how to create
proxies. See you there.
8. Create Proxy Clips - Kdenlive Basics: Hi there. In this lesson, we're going to learn how
we can take our clips. So our media over here, mainly the video or video files, and convert them
into proxy clips. Now, proxy clips are
lower resolution, lower size versions
of your footage of your media that allow you
to go through it with ease. So your system makes less effort to go through
then when you're ready, you can swap out the proxy
for the original footage. For example, if you're
working with eight K, it's a bit heavy
on your machine. You simply create some
proxies for it during the rough cut segment of your workflow and once you
have things established, the pacing and the cuts, the transitions, and
these little details, you can then switch back to
the original clip and work on the colors and maybe
some VFX, et cetera. Alright. So for this here, most of our clips are four K, so we're going to go
ahead and create proxies, and it's a
straightforward process. So first thing to do is
go up to your menu bar. Let's go to settings, go down to Configure
KD and Live. We're going to ignore
all of this for now. We only want to go to
proxy clips down here, and then we're going to
check enable proxy clips. So make sure this is check. You can ignore all of the
other settings for now, and then go down to apply
and then press Okay. Once we're done
with that, we can simply left click
on the first video, hold down Shift, left click on the last one, right click on. And you have proxy
clips right here. You can also go up to Clip, so let's make sure
to grab all of them. You can go up to
clip and Proxy clip. Now, I already have
the proxies created, so it's going to go very
fast for me, but for you, it could take just a minute, maybe two, depending
on your machine. And once it's done,
here we have it. We have these low resolution
versions of our clips. To disable it, you
simply right click or go up to clips and
click on Proxy Clip. And it reverts it back to
the non proxy version. So HirasOce you have your
proxy clips created, you can go back and forth
between them with ease. Now, I'll go ahead and save
the changes that I've done, so I'll go to File, Save. Alright. Now, this is
not a mandatory step, but it's a good
way of lightening the load when going
through rough cuts, right? Another way to lower
the processing power. Another way of
lowering the demand, the processing demand here on your system is with the preview, so the preview resolution here in these little drop downs. So they work together.
So if I change this one, it's going to change
on both sides. So one to one is the full resolution of the
media that we're working with. 720 P is, you know, 720 P and so on and so forth. So that is it for
creating proxies, and this will really lighten
things up and allow us to have seamless playback
through our media. And right now we
don't really need the high quality visuals, because we're just
going to arrange our clips on the timeline. So in the next lesson,
we're going to learn how we can add our
clips at the timeline, cut them up, move them around, et cetera. See you there.
9. Add Clips to Timeline - Kdenlive Basics: Hi there. In this lesson, we're going to learn
how we can take clips and add them
to the timeline. So before we get into it, I will be showing
you the easy or the simple way of going
about your edits, but I do feel it is
necessary to show you a standard way of
organizing your files, importing them, and preparing
them to go on the timeline. But don't worry, we'll go back to simplicity very quickly. I just think it is a
good practice to teach you the standard way
of going about it. Alright, let's jump into it. So I'll expand the
folders again. So, as I've mentioned,
you can simply left click hold drag it onto the timeline, and
there you have it. Our clip is now on the timeline, simple as that, but there's so much more to it. So I'll
go ahead and delete this. You can left click on it, and then right click and delete or simply hit
Delete on the keyboard. Okay. So before we continue, one thing I'll do
very quickly is I'll click on 01 Videos. I'll go inside of the
file manager assets or rather the project file. Inside of renders,
and I'm going to import the render over here.
You do not have to do this. I simply want to demonstrate the difference
between working with footage that has audio and working with footage
that does not have audio. So I have the footage
selected here. Press Okay, and
there we have it. Now, you're wondering why I have two audio tracks
like this and you don't, we'll get into that
later in the course. Okay, so over here, you can already see the
difference is that we have this little scope over
here for the audio, not the scope, the graph. And up here, we have
these two little icons, one of well, video, which symbolizes video, and
another one of a speaker. If you look at our other clips
here, we don't have that. There's no graph of audio. I mean, wave waveform.
There we go. There's no waveform of audio, and we don't have the
two little buttons. If I left click hold and
drag the view down here, it imports the clip. Okay? That's one way of
importing our clips, as well. So when I drag and drop these, it's only just a video clip. If I drag and drop
this one over here, it's going to be a video
and an audio track. Now, how they lay
out on the timeline, you can determine over here in the timeline
bar at the top, all the way to the left, we
have this little button here, left click on it, and
this is how you can choose the layout of your
audio and video tracks. I like it to be
split audio tracks. If you want to mix
the audio tracks, you can see here V one and A
one get stacked up together, V two and A two get
stacked up together. And then, in this
case, you can have them separated, et cetera. So pick whichever one you
feel most comfortable with. I'm going to be working
with split audio tracks. Now, as you can see, these
two are linked together. So whenever I grab one, it moves the other as well. You can ungroup them by right clicking on it and
go to ungroup clips. You can also use the
keyboard shortcut. So shift. Well, Control
plus Shift plus G. Okay. Alright. So go ahead
and delete this. Now, let's say, for example, that you wanted to import just the video part of
this and not the audio, all you would have to do is left click on the
little speaker here, drag it in and drop it over
one of your audio tracks. And there you go. We've imported the audio without the video. Same goes for the video. Left
click on the little icon, drag it in, and you've imported just the video
and not the audio. So, yeah, these are cool, neat little tricks to know. I think the same thing goes
over here in the project bin. You have these little icons. You can click on them to choose which one
you want to import. Okay, so the assets that
I've provided to you do not include any videos that have audio tracks
attached to them. So when you're working with
video tracks that have audio tracks attached to them, so they're
grouped together, you can still move the ends of your video and audio tracks
separately or individually, simply by holding
down Shift before you click on the edge and
drag it in or out. All right. With that
said, let's continue. I just wanted to put that out. Okay, so let's go back to how to add our clips to the timeline,
the professional way. So I'll delete this.
We move it there. Okay. So let's start
with this clip over here and I'll move the playhead
back to the beginning. You can also simply hold down Control and press the
left arrow on a PC, so control on a Mac, I believe it would be
command and then left arrow, and it will send it
back to the beginning. Okay, so we have
this clip over here. Now, first, if we want
to play back this, we could left click
on the View monitor. We could also press
this little play button over here or push
this back here. Or alternatively,
we could use the J, K and L keys on the keyboard. So if I were to press L, it would initiate the playback. If I press K, it's going to pause
the playback, and if I press J, it's going to put the playback
in reverse. All right? Hope it's not too complicated. So L plays. If you press L a second time, it accelerates, press it again, it acceleratees even more, so on and so forth,
until it does. K is going to pause it, and then J is going
to play it backward. If you press it again,
it accelerates. Press it again, accelerate, accelerate until it doesn't. All right. That's how
you can navigate through these clips just
using the keyboard. Next, as you're moving
through these clips, you can choose the areas or the segments that
you want to keep. For example, let's say
I want to grab it right when she's about to
drink her coffee. We can set what are known
as in and out points. You can do so by
left clicking on these little icons
under the view monitor. You have the first one,
which is set zone in, you have the second one,
which is set zone out. So this one would be for the end of the portion you want to keep, and the first one is
for the beginning of the portion that
you want to keep the keyboard shortcuts or
I for N and O for out. All right. So let's
say you can also use the mouse to scrub if you're not comfortable with the
keyboard shortcuts. So you arrive, let's say to
where you want to grab it. So we're going to say
just around here, maybe. So you can either left click on it or press the
keybar shortcut I, and we'll move this blue zone to this part where we're at. Then let's move to
where we want to cut. So again, you can simply use the keyboard shortcut,
but that's up to you. So a little bit before that, let's see over here,
then I'll press O out. And now, finally, how do we
add this to the timeline? Well, we could left
click hold and drag, and it would just
grab this segment. That's one way of
doing another way of doing it would be
to use either one of these buttons or just
the keyboard shortcuts to insert the clip zone, so the clip zone over here, which is currently active, to insert it into the timeline, and then we have B, which is to overwrite clip Zone in timeline. All right. So how do these two
work? Again, bear with me. We're going to go
back to simplicity, but just so you know
the professional way, and then we're just
going to go at it. All the way, okay? If we
press V with this over here, it's going to add
just this segment. And notice, once we've added this segment to the timeline, we get this yellow bar over
here in the view monitor. This lets us know which parts of this clip are currently
on the timeline. So if we had another segment
of this clip over here, it would also get highlighted with this little yellow bar. Alright, so we've just press V to import this segment
into the timeline. We can also press B, and it's going to do
seemingly the same thing. What's the difference?
Oh, before we continue, if you want to
choose which track for these inserts to happen, simply left click all the way
to the left of the track. You have these green
highlights here. So you simply left click
on the one you want to be the active
track, if you will, and that's where they
will get added the next time you press the keyboard
shortcuts or click up here. Alright. So I'll go ahead
and delete all of these. So let's go ahead and press V. It will add our segment
where the playhead was and you can see it moves the
playhead to the end of it. Now, if I were to place
the playhead in the middle here and let's go ahead
and grab a different clip, so just grab this
clip over here. Now, this is the complete clip. We haven't grabbed a
segment of it yet. And we're simply going to press V. So insert clip
zone and timeline. And notice it's Zoom in here. So let's go down here,
Zoom in, Zoom in. We now have two segments of the first clip and this
one in the middle here. If I undo, you can see all
it did is insert itself from the playhead on and push the other half of this clip all the way to the other side. So that's what insert does. Overwrite, however,
so B will simply delete whatever is in its
way and take its place. So that's the difference
between insert and overwrite. Alright. So you want to make sure that the
playhead is not over anything that you do not want to remove, cut, or overwrite. So I'll go ahead and
delete this one as well. Now, we have this as a segment. Let's say we wanted to
grab multiple segments of this same clip to add
them to the timeline, but we also want
to preserve them. Well, there's a way of
doing this, as well. And this is with this
little button over here. Next to our in and out zone, which is insert zone
and project Bin. The keyboard shortcut is
Control plus I on PC, Coenus I on Mac,
I would imagine. So let's simply
left click on it. And you'll notice we get a little arrow next
to this clip now. If you open it, you'll
see we have zone one, which is this little segment. If we were to move over
here, move the zone, and insert, we get zone two, which is this segment
that we've just created. So you see back and forth. And now if I were to insert
these into the timeline, you see we get these two little orange spots or yellow spots, yellow spots over
here, indicating that these segments of our clip are on the timeline
at the moment. Okay. So now all we have
to do is to simply grab these segments of our clips
that we would like to use so then we can later
put them on the timeline. It's good to keep them safe
because ifever you change the timing or so and you like
to get the original timing, you can, and you can also modify the clips that you
have later on. So let's go ahead
and get started. So for this one, I'd say right
when she's about to start drinking and right when she's done like this
and blinks out, and then I'll insert
in the clip zone. For her, it's right
when she's about to drink the coffee,
like, let's say, here. And then as she's taking
it out there, insert. And I'll just go ahead and do this for each one of the clips, just grabbing the parts that I know that I'll be
using most lightly, even if I have to cut and
trim them afterwards. Which is when we'll be getting into the basic editing tools. Okay, insert for this one. Let's say, right there. And then right when you put
down the cup like this. And finally, I don't think
I'll be using this clip. For this one, it's right
before it starts to shake. So I think maybe over here, let's push this back. So these are not fine cuts. These are just roughly
what we want to keep. Now, this might not work
for you in every project, but I'll go ahead and
expand all of these. And I'll grab all of the clip zones. So I'll
click on the first one. Hold down Control and PC and
I guess Command on a Mac, and we'll click on each one of the zones that
we're going to use. Then we'll left click hold and drag it down
to the timeline. I'll make sure it's all
the way to the beginning. Then I'll move the playhead
to the start as well. You can also hold
down Control and press the left arrow with
the timeline active. And it's going to move the playhead all the
way to the beginning. If you hold down
Control on a PC or command on the mac and you
press the right arrow, it will move it to the end of whichever media is
on the timeline. So move it back to the
start, and there we have it. We have imported all of
our clips in our timeline. So that is it for this lesson. I did not want to overwhelm. So the next lesson is where we're going to
continue this process. Now, no more fancy workflow. We're just going to go at
it head on. See you there.
10. Basic Editing Tools - Kdenlive Basics: Hi. And welcome to
what might just be the second part of this
basic editing lesson. Let's get right into it. So last time, we went ahead and created
all of our proxies, and we've imported our clips. We've learned about some
of the keyboard shortcuts, JK and L, and V and B. Now we're going to learn about the basic editing tools down here as we organize our clip. Now, the very first
one or rather the by default one would
be the selection tool, keyboar shortcut S, that little S in
parentheses over here, and this allows
you to left click, hold, and move your
clips around, right? If there's space for them, it'll just move them to that space. Now, when it comes to
moving your clips around, you can adopt a
different workflow, such as over here and just drop down above the
names of our track. Have a drop down which
has normal mode, overwrite mode, and insert mode. It works the same or similarly as the insert zone buttons
that we have up here. Meaning, if I switch to
overwrite and I grab a clip, it allows me now to move it over the other clips that are
already on the timeline, and if I let go, it's going
to overwrite that segment. So I'm going to undo the change, and insert would do exactly
as the insert above here. I would drop it over
this clip, let go, and it's going to insert itself and push the content
to the side. So I'm going to
undo this as well. So I prefer to leave it
to normal for myself. And let's go ahead and
arrange our clips. So with the selection tool, we can move our clips in whichever order that
we want to have them. So I know I'm going to
go with this guy first, then this one's
going to show up. And after that, it is this lady. Then we have this one over here, and then it goes to this one. Afterwards, we can
add our audio and the logo that we have that shows up at
end of the trailer. Alright. So here
we have our clips. They are basically in the order that we
need them to be in. And let's say that we're
going to keep this to 15 or 16 seconds over here. We can add a guide, so we know that this is the end of the edit that we're
trying to do right now. And to add the guide, simply press G on the keyboard, and we're going to get
the pop up over here. If I expand this, you can see Edit
guide, Kate and Live. You can name the guide
however you want, so I'll say end and
choose the category. So this is when we were
starting up the project, we had different categories. We could rename them and
change these sort of settings. This is where it would come
in handy, and there it is. So this is going to be the end. It's going to be red, press.
Okay, there we have it. So now this allows
me to know where I want to end my edit over here. So it's a nice little
guide to have. We can see the timestamp under our project
monitor over here. So we're at the 16th second,
and there we have it. Next, we have the razor tool. The razor tool is the pair
of scissors over here. The keyboard shortcut is X, and it allows you to make
cuts through your clip. Now, please don't
get confused with this guide that we just added. So if I click around the clips, you'll notice nothing happens. You have to place the cursor over the clip where you
want to make the cut. Left click, and there you
have it, we've made a cut. Now, I don't know how to
join them back together, so I'll simply undo the change. Undo the cut. Alright. So that's basically
what the scissor tool allows you to do or
the razor tool, sorry. Next, we have the spacer tool, keyboard Sircut M.
The spacer tool, essentially, you can
see the icon over here, it grabs everything that
is after the mouse cursor. Meaning, notice that this lady, her clip is right here or place it right at
the edge of her clip. Left click hold and drag. And it grabs everything, so all of the clips
get selected, and we can move
them all together. And it affects them on
different layers as well. So if I push this up, grab the space or two. Left click hold, it moves
even that layer. Alright. Now, if I move it ever
so slightly forward, so now it is also above
this man over here, left click hold and move, you'll see it grabs it, as well. So everything that's behind it, it'll grab and ignore
everything in front. Now, if you only want
to grab the content of a single layer or
a single track, simply hold down Control
on a PC, I guess, command on a Mac and
left click on the track, which we want to
grab the content, and it will only
grab on that track. Another way is to lock
your tracks, and that way, the spacer two will not affect
the clips on that track. So you can do it with the
little locks over here, simply left click
toggle on and off. Alright. After that, we have the slip too and the ripple too. Now, before we get
into these two, let's grab the selection tool, and let's study the anatomy
of our clips over here. So zoom in a little bit. If you hover the
cursor at the edge, so the right edge, the
beginning of your clip, you get a little
green highlight. If you left click, hold, you can drag and resize
your clip so you can reveal the content that
has been cut out, okay? Same thing goes for
the other side, except that we're going
to get a red outline. Left click, hold, and drag. So this is what would
allow you to know which of the edges you're grabbing when grabbing the
edges over here. The red outline is for
the end of a clip, and the green outline is for
the beginning of a clip. So now that we know that, let's scale this back
down to fit in here. I'll move this down here. Okay. So if I were to
resize this clip over here, you can see I'm
just leaving a gap. We can remove this
gap very easily. We could grab the space or two, left click drag and
move everything there that control out of this. Or we could simply
right click in the middle here and
go to remove space, and it would remove the
space. So very simple. Although there are some
caveats with remove space, for example, if I
move, let's say, this clip above here, and I click right click, say, remove space, notice it
will ignore the clip above, but it did move this clip below. So that's one of the caveats
where you might want to use the space or two and move everything together.
So undo this. All right, so let's undo
the trim that we just did. Now, with the ripple two, we're going to look at
the ripple two first. With the ripple two, as
I'm trimming the strip, it is moving the content
after the strip in. So it's not leaving a gap. It's going to move everything
and cover the gap. So that can be a little bit
heavy on the system, as well. Notice, when you
left click hold, you get the in and out of
the cut that you're making. Okay. And finally, with
the slip to over here, we've already
established that there's more content on either
side of this clip, which is why we can
expand it out like this. What the slip to
allows you to do, so the slip to over here
is to slide this content. So what is visible over here, you can change its content, but keep the duration
of the clip itself, and you get the in and
out preview as well. Okay? Alright. So that's
it for the basic tools. Now, the very first one, do not use timeline zone for insert. Timeline Zone is referring
to this over here. It's similar to the viewer
monitor where we can choose the segments
of our clips that we want to cut or import. This allows us to select which portion of our
timeline we want to render. So when it's time to render, you can either render
the entire timeline or you can simply choose
portions of the timeline. At the same time,
this portion can be used for importing your
clips using the insert, and this is the toggle to tell it to either use the playhead. So this cursor over here or
to use the timeline zone. Right, simple enough. Matter of fact, we can set the timeline zone using the in and out keyboard
shortcuts as well. So, for example, if I
move the playhead to our guide over here and I
simply press O on the keyboard, it will move the outpoint all the way to that
point over here. Okay, now, given that we've modified this
clip quite a bit, I'll simply delete this one
that we have over here. But before I do so, I'm
going to go all the way at the bottom here and I'm going to choose clip and Project Ben. Left click on it. It's going to grab that clip and the
Project Bin for me. Now I can simply delete this
and insert the new one. Now, of course,
you could override it with the insert method, so to move the
playhead behind it, simply hold down out on a PC or, I guess, option on a Mac. And well, of course, let's make sure that
the timeline is the active segment of our UI. Hold down on a PC
or option on a MAC. And when you press the
left or right arrows, the playhead will
jump at the end or beginning of each of the clips
available on the timeline. So that's a quick way of navigating your
timeline, as well. Another detail that will come into play later is if you hold down Shift and you press
the left and right arrows, it will jump 1 second in the amount of frames
that you have set up. So in our case, it would jump 24 frames, which is 1 second. It's a nice, interesting
little detail. We'll look at it
later. All right. So I'll go ahead and press M on the keyboard
to grab the spacer two. I'll move these clips back. Then I'll grab this
zoom over here. And since there's nothing
really over here, I'll simply press
V to insert it, grab the spacer two, grab
these and pull them back in. Alright, so that's it
for the basic tools. We've learned how to move
things around, cut them, resize them, so
basically trim them, and slip and ripple. Alright. So before
we go off here, we'll simply grab the
audio track, drag it in. Make sure it's all the
way at the beginning. I'll press X on the keyboard
to grab the eraser tool, and then I'll simply cut
our audio track here, press S on the keyboard to
grab the selection tool, make sure to have the part
of the track selected, and then I can just press
delete and delete it. All right. So that is
it for this lesson. In the next lesson, we're going to start adding
some composition, how to change the speed of our clips in a little
bit of time remapping. Alright, then. So see you there.
11. Time Remapping - Kdenlive Basics: Hi, and welcome
to this lesson on time remapping or rather
changing the speed of our clips, either to be slower or faster. There are two separate
methods for doing this, and we're going to
take a look at each of them. So let's get started. Okay, now, for this
particular project, at this stage of our editing, we can go ahead and use the
soundtrack to help us with the pacing of our edit for
this particular project. So the first thing
to do would be to simply go ahead and
do a simple playback, get a feel for the
variations in the track, and see what comes to mind. So there are a few things
that I picked up on. And the first one being
that I want a transition to happen around this
drop in the beat. Okay, that's the first thing. And the second
thing would be that this second clip over
here is too slow. It's actually going
in slow motion. I'll disable the audio for now. Can see it's slow motion
compared to the first one. And I'd rather have
it a little faster. So to change the
acceleration of a clip, simply right click on it, go down to change speed.
We'll get a pop up. And here you can
change the speed either by using the slider or typing it in manually.
This works in percentage. A higher percentage
is a higher speed, a lower percentage
is a slower speed. Then we have these two
checkboxes over here, one for pitch compression. This is if you are using an
audio track or if you had an audio track attached or grouped with this
video over here. And then finally, we
have reverse clip, which would be to play it
backwards. Right then. So I'll change this
over here to 120, press Okay, and
see how it looks. Still a little too slow, so I'm going to accelerate
it even more. And to change the speed, we don't have to go inside of that. Menu. We can do it
directly on the timeline. And to do so, all we
have to do or move this backward is hold down Control on a PC
or command on the Mc, then click at the edge of your strip here and
simply trim it in. You'll see at the
top left corner, we have the percentage number, so this is the speed percentage, and it is changing as we drag it in, while holding Control. Right, so let's see
what 162 looks like. Still a little too slow, and now our clip cuts
a little too soon. So I'm going to expand the clip a bit without holding control. And since I have Snap enabled, it's simply going to
snap to the playhead, and it's a little
too slow still, so I'm going to
accelerate it a bit more. So let's say maybe 190 to 200, see, I'm using the
snapping here, so 209. Alright, more or
less a good speed, and then I'll
simply expand it or extend it a little
bit more as such. Alright, now I'm going
to hit M on the keyboard to grab the spacer tool
and drag our clips, but nothing's happening.
What's going on? Well, to put it simply, our audio track down here, reaches to the end of our timeline and thus cannot
be pushed back any further. And since it is technically
behind the cursor, it is also getting grabbed
by the Spacer tool. So, of course, we've
seen this before. We can simply hold down Control and move the clips that
are on this track. But in the case where we
would have, let's say, this strip above here, using control would not serve us much because then we're
ignoring this clip above. So the fix for this is simply
to lock the audio track, so we can lock the
track over here. So now the spacer tool will ignore it and we can grab
all of our clip, right? So go ahead and move
this back down. Okay. So this speed is okay. Now I'm going to accelerate
this clip over here, but we will not be using the same method that we did
for this clip over here. Instead, we're going
to use time remap. Now, I've noticed that
with the time remap, once you apply it to a clip, changing the duration of
that clip or even making cuts to it does not play well
with the time remapping. So we want to make
sure that we have exactly what we want to
remap here. So let's see. I want to start with
her having the cup a little closer to
herself to her lips, and at the end, the end is okay. Move this in, space or
two, move everything in. And now we're going to
do the time remapping. Let's right click on
the strip over here, the clip, go down to Time Remap. Check it on. You're going to
get the time remap window. It could be above here or
anywhere on the layout, really. Simply grab the tab or the name of it could
be at the bottom or the top and drag it to wherever you want
to put the time remap. In my case, I'll
simply put it with the effects and
composition stack, and let's take a look at
the options over here. Now, first thing to note
is this right here, this grading is
essentially a timeline, similarly on the view monitor
in the project monitor. If you click at the top,
we have a playhead. Left click hold and drag. Notice that the playback is happening in
the view monitor. So this would be applying
the effect directly to the strip inside of our
project bin. And down here, We have another playhead. If you left click hold and drag, you'll notice that it is doing the playback in our
project monitor. So this is where we
want to do the changes that we want to see
on the project. And up here, you can do
the changes directly to the clip itself and
reuse that same clip. Alright. So to use
time remapping, all we have to do
is set a couple of keyframes where we want to keep it at the same speed and where
we want to accelerate it. So I'll scrub through this. And right when she's
putting the cup to her lips is where I
want to accelerate it. To add a keyframe, simply click on the Stopwatch
with the plus on it, add keyframe, and
there we have it. Then I'll scrub through and go to where I want it
to slow down again. So right around when she's
taking the cup away from her. So around here, let's see. I'll add another keyframe. You can use the stop watches
that have the arrows so left to right to jump
between keyframes. Alright. Now, let's go
ahead and click right under the red circle here for our second keyframe
that we created. Left click hold and drag it in closer to the first one. Let go. We'll see that the
clip shortens, and this is simply to compensate
for the change in time, right? So let's play back. So it starts slow and then accelerates
and then slows down. Maybe a little too much. I'll
push it back a little bit, and I'll accelerate the
very beginning slightly. All right. So next inside
of the time remapping, we have a few more options such as the check boxes
at the bottom here. So pitch compression,
again, is for audio. If we had audio
attached to this video, we have preserved speed
of next keyframe. So if we want to preserve the
speed of the next keyframe, and finally, we have
frame blending. So this right here would add some motion blur to the parts
that have been accelerated. So you can see here we have motion blur in the background. If I uncheck this,
play it back again, we have less motion blur. It's a bit sharper. But with it, it's a
lot of motion blur. Alright. So that
is essentially how we can accelerate or
decelerate our strips. Now, I forgot to mention that
we can also stretch a clip. So if you hold down Control, click on it and drag it out. You'll see we get a
smaller percentage, and now we have a
much slower playback. So I'll hold down Control again. I'll drag it back in and
then move it into place. Space or two, push everything
in, and there we have it. And finally, I'll
simply do the same add a bit of time remapping to this clip over here and a
little bit to this one. Before I do so, I'm going to
delete the time remapping that we added to this by clicking on the
trashcan over here. Then I'm going to change the intro so that it
starts right there. As such, move everything in. I'll turn on the
track. Okay. I'll cut this one just a little bit more. Trim it down. Or
this one over here. Oh, add just a little
bit of acceleration to the beginning. And
I'll drag the rest in. Okay. Let's right click on the
strip over here, the clip. Okay, so, finally, I
added a bit of time remapping to the first
clip just a little bit. You can see it over here. Just push these in a little bit. I've accelerated this
clip over here even more just to get it closer to the drop so I can make
the transition later. And then I added just a bit of time
remapping to this one, so they start walking
like what seems like normal speed for a little bit,
and then slow down again. And it is safe to expand a
clip with the time remapping. It is just not safe to contract, like, shorten a clip
with the time remapping. Alright, so that is
it for this lesson. In the next lesson, we're
going to take a look at transitions. See you there.
12. Adding Transitions - Kdenlive Basics: Hi, and welcome to this
lesson on transitions. So this one is going to be
a quick one relatively, and it's quite simple. To add transitions, we're going to grab two of these
clips over here. We're going to leave
these as they are, and then we'll add the
transition to them. But first, let's look at
how transitions work. So I'll just import
these two over here, and we can
work with these two. So transitions,
essentially, you can do them right here
on the timeline. Is that at the bottom
corners of our strips, we have these little purple dots that show up if you hover. They appear for
all of our strips. If you simply left
click on it once, it adds a composition
track right here, which you can repurpose, move around, use
for something else. So it adds this little
composition track, and you want to make
sure that snapping is on for this because it is important that the edges
align with these edges. Otherwise, you might
get some weird, funky, one or two frames of weirdness, really. Alright,
to zoom back out. And by default, it gives you
a simple wipe like this. We have a few parameters
for this over here one of them
being this drop down, which allows us to choose
different types of composition to apply to this one over here so we can change
the mode of it. But with the wipe over here, we have composition track. And essentially, if we
had other tracks here, we would have the
option to choose which track we want this
composition to be between. So we have it on video
track number two. If this was video
track number three, let's say I inserted a
track over here, say, Okay, we could still make
the transition happen between just those two by going in this drop
down and choosing V one, so it knows that it's going
from V three to V one. Okay, so just undo this. Then we have the wipe method. So it's a list of
the different wipes that you can use over here. And we also have
this softness meter. And when you drag it up, you get a bit of a blur on the wipe. So instead of a sharp line, we're getting a soft line, and it applies for just
about all of them. Alright. And then
we have the invert. Invert simply changes the
direction of the transition. Right here, you can see
we're getting the bilinear, so it's splitting
open from the middle. If we invert, it's going to
collapse from top and bottom. Next, we have revert, and revert is essentially
going to instead of going from this clip on the left to this
clip on the right, it's going to jump
to the clip on the right and transition back
to the clip on the left, which doesn't make much
sense, but it's an option. Alright, then. So that is
for one form of transition. So we can delete these simply, you know, hit Delete.
There you have it. If you click this button,
and there is nothing, it's going to add a wipe, but it goes to
nothing, essentially. Other method to
add or transitions would simply be to
click and drag one of these compositions option
over here and simply drag it over the timeline and then fit it to the
clip that you want. But, for example, here
we have multiply, and it would simply
multiply this top one over the bottom
one there, right? So you have lots of different
options inside of here. We have composite and transform, which would allow you to do certain transforms to the clips that this is being
applied to, right? No, this is not affecting
this one down here. It's only affecting
this one up here, so they don't all work
like transitions. Okay. So that's
for these methods, very simple,
straightforward enough. So I'll delete those two strips. And now let's go
back to our project. Let me zoom in here. I want to add a
Let me mute this. So I want to add a
transition between this lady over to this
lady over there. Okay? For this transition, we're going to use a different option. We're going to click on
this button up here above our timeline next to
our in and out insert. We have this option which says mix clips. The
keyboard shortcut is. So if I were to move
the playhead cursor to the left of my clip
here and I press U, it's going to add the
transition to the left. So control z out of this. Instead, we're going to move the playhead closer
to the right, and then we're going to
press U and there we go. It added this purple thing, which makes a transition
between those two. That way, we don't have to
place one above the other. If you move them, it
actually removes it. So undo this. You
can also delete it directly by simply left clicking on it and
then hit delete. So I'll undo that as well. And in here, it's
about the same thing. You can choose different
transition methods here, and they each come with
their own options. So for this particular one, I'm going to introduce
you to the slides. And slides, essentially,
well, it slides, and you can control
where it comes from, where it ends with
these controls here, and you can also control
the opacity of it. So fairly simple. But instead, for this one, I will
be using the push, and I'm going to push left. So this new clip is going to come in from the right and
push the old clip to the left, and that's what we have here. Now, let's see how it
sounds with or beat. Now, I really do want this
to happen on the beat, and the best way for me
to do this right now is simply to shorten the clips
before and make it reach. You could always try and grab
this edge and put it in, but then you'll notice over
here, there's a freeze frame. It's not moving anymore. So it doesn't work that way. So you can either delete it and make sure that these
are closer to each other and then add it or simply move these
other clips here. Now, we did some time
remapping on this. So if I shrink it down, we might get some anomalies. This one over here does not
have any time remapping, even though we change the speed, changing the
duration of the clip itself will not affect
the change in speed. So with that said,
we can shorten this. Let's say, all the way
to here, move this in. Let's see how this looks. Click on this, place
the cursor closer, press U on the keyboard. Alright, let's unmute this. So let's take a look at this. You can also open the drop down and then start
typing in push. It's going to find the push. Okay? All right. Now, we can add some
motion blur to it, which would just
consist of us adding a blur effect over these
two strips as this happens. So it looks like
there's a motion blur. Okay. So that's another way
of adding the transitions. For this over here, we are going to make
a transition between them walking and
this cup over here. So let's go ahead and do that. For this, I'm going to shrink this a little bit,
bring this in. And now I can click on
either one of these, press U on the keyboard
and add the transition. Okay? And I'll switch this
to a white transition. I'll switch it to
spiral. There we go. And now I want to invert
the direction so it looks more like they are getting
removed with the swipe. Maybe just a tiny
bit of softness. And there we have it. Let's see if it matches
with the beef. All right. So we have our two
transitions here. And finally, we're
going to do a fade in, fade out effect with our clips. And let's go to the project Bn. Let's go to our graphics, so images. They're
all grouped together. So we're going to grab
the night owl brew, drag it in here, and drop
it up here. All right. So right now it's
a little bit long, so we can trim it down, let's say to around here. I'll drag this out a
little bit as well. Oh. I'll push this in a bit
more so it happens sooner. Okay, let's say around here. Now, in order to create
fade in and fade out, at the top corners this
time, at the start, we have a green one, similar to the green edge when we were
resizing our strips or clips, and over to the left, we have a red button. Now, you can either
left click on them, and it will add a fade in effect inside of the effect
and composition stack. So I'll delete this one. Or instead of left clicking, you can left click
hold and drag to where you want to
limit the fade in. And it's going to
let me mute this. It's going to gradually
fade in, right? So you can control the timing, even on the strip itself. You click on the
point and you can drag it back and forth. So to delete this, you could
also simply click on it, drag in, and it disappears. So we want this to fade in. So we're going to add
the fade in over here, but we don't want it to go
all the way to the back. So I'll simply left click
hold and I'll drag it myself, and let's see how it looks. It comes in a little fast. I'll drag this
forward a little bit more as well and push this in. Okay. You can also tell
it to fade from black, but in this case, we don't
want it to fade from black. Picture that everywhere
that has opacity is fading from a black
background onto the original image.
So uncheck this. It's useful for other things, but not for this
particular case. Before we move on, I'll add a fade out to this
cup over here. Left click hold and drag it in, so it fades to black. For this one, I would
check on fade to black. That way, instead of simply
fading to transparency, it's going to fade to
a black background. All right. That is
it for this lesson. The next lesson, we'll be taking a look at effects.
See you there.
13. Adding Video Effects - Kdenlive Basics: In this lesson, we'll be
taking a look at effects. So let's get started with it. The first thing we'll do
is on our logo over here, we're going to change the
color of it to white. So we're going to add
an effect to make it white so that it stands out
on this black background. Matter of fact, I'll drag
this in a little bit so that the black
background happens sooner. Then we can add a black
solid here just to be sure. So to add effects, simply go to the Effects tab
over in our Project panel. Now, this is the part
where I should probably mention that we have
different workspaces, each one for a different
step in our process. And right now, we're
at the effects, so we could go to effects
and use this layout, but it's not really necessary, although I recommend
that later on, you can adopt this
sort of workflow. Now you can see on editing here, the time remapping
has been moved, so I'll move it back
inside of the stack, scale this down, and I'll
hide the audio mixer. Well, hide it. Okay. So to add an effect
to our strip down here, simply go over to effects. And up here, we
have a search bar. Above the search bar, we have
these different categories. The first one is general, so it gives you a general
look at the effects. Next, we have video effects. So this is specifically
for video strips. We have the audio ones, so specifically
for audio tracks. Then we have these custom
effects stacks, if you will. So this is when you
start having, let's say, you have a color correction process that you do each time, you add different effects
to the layer stack, and then you save that
stack of effects. And here so you can
apply it with one click each time you
jump into a project. Next, we have the favorites, and the favorites can be found right above the timeline here. It is this little star. And these are for quick access. You can add whatever
to favorites. So if we went to any effect
in here, right click, you can say Add to favorites, and that's about
as simple as that. This last one here allows you
to download effects online. So if you're connected
to the Internet, you can download some effects. So we'll start with
some video effects. And to change the color here, we're going to look for
something like color overlay. Right? So we write
color up here. We get a few options. We have color overlay. Now, to add an effect, you can either select a
strip you would like to add the effect to and then
double click on the effect, and it will add
it to your strip. You can see we
have color overlay here. Let me scale this up. Or alternatively, you can
simply left click hold and drag it onto or drag it onto
any clip for that matter. Now, you can add effects to
your clips on the timeline. You can add it to the
tracks themselves. So it affects every
clip on that track. You can add effects to Master. Now, master would affect
everything on the timeline. So video and audio. That is that video effects will affect video clips and images, and audio effects will affect, well, audio tracks. All right. And you can even add effects to your clips directly inside
of the project bin, similarly to the time remapping. Okay, so now we've added. So if we left click on it,
we've added a fade in, which we can collapse up
here with this little arrow. We added a cover overlay, and then we added an extra
color overlay which we'll delete by clicking on
this red trash can here. So we have quite a few
buttons all around here, so let's take a
quick look at them. We're going to look
at color overlay. First one at the top
here is for keyframe. So you can enable or disable the key frames of the effects.
That's the first one. The second one is to enable
or disable the effect itself. You can see here. And this one over here is for the presets. You can reset effect. So if I had changed the color, I could just reset it to
the default, that's it. And then we can save presets. So if you add specific
values here for something, you can save it
and next time load those values each time.
Reset out of this. Next, we can save the effect. And this is where it
would go inside of this little menu here
for your custom effects. Give it a name, description,
put it in there. You can do the same up here. So this is the entire
stack of effects. So you could save this and
it would import fading and color overlay with one click
or two clicks, that is. All right? And then next
to it, we simply have these arrows to move
or effects up or down. You can also left click on
them and drag them up or down. And finally, we can delete them. Okay. Now, for effects
that have keyframes, we have this button up here, which allows us to hide the keyframes from the
timeline or show them. Notice this clip
over here is blue. Let me add a keyframe over here. You can see we have a red dot. We can drag it to the side. It will affect it over
here in the stack. Alright. We can also
play back the clip that has the effect using
this timeline over here. We have the buttons
down here to add our keyframes and to jump
between our keyframes. Then we have a few
more options here, but we'll look at them
in just a moment. All right, so I'll delete
this keyframe over here, I'll even disable the
keyframes for this one, and I'll change the
color to white. So in order to change
this to white, we're going to drop
the saturation, push up the lightness
and drop the mix. Now it turns to white. The mix is to mix between what we're doing in the
original color. And if you're not mixing it, then simply it has
zero saturation, so zero color, and it
has full lightness, so full brightness. All right. If you hover over it,
you see it tells you that holding down
shift will allow you to adjust the values in smaller increments.
And that's it. We now have this in white. But it is quite large. It's quite big. How
do we resize it? To resize this, we're going
to need a transform effect. We could also use a transform composite transform
strip over here, simply drag it in and then do the modification to it itself. Or we can add a
transform effect to our clip over here simply
by going to our star, going down to transform. You can either click and drag or double click
and it will add it. Now for effects that have
been added to the favorites, if we look for transform here, you'll notice it is
in a bolder font. So this lets you know that something has been
added to favorites. So you see it removed from
favorites. All right. So with the transform
effect in there, what we can do is change the
scale down here with size. Several ways you
can go about this. One way is to simply left
click on the word size here. Left click hold and drag left or right to
scale up or down. All right. So scale this down. Let's say around here. How I want it to
look at the end. We can also move it
left or right with the X and Y values. So X is left and right. Y is up and down. We can also change the dimension
of it right from here, and we have this chain over here to do it in
a symmetric way. You can also align it
to the canvas so far, so move it to the
side, center it, move it to the other
side up down, center. Alright? And finally, these
little buttons over here, it's to adjust the original
size of the image. Just to demonstrate
what they do. If I say fit to WI, it's going to fit the size
of this box to the With. So instead, I'll simply go
for adjust to original size. So this should be
the original size of our clip over here. We can verify by going
to Project Bin Image. Click on the image,
go to Clip property. And you can see here
it's not a huge image. It's only 733 by 469. Alright. So with this, you can also control it
from the project monitor. So we have this center point to move it around left
click hold and drag, and then we have these
corner points to scale it. Don't worry, it will
scale proportionally. So I'll scale this to a convenient enough
size to center it, I'll simply use these controls. Now, if you're not seeing
these red borders to allow you to control the
transform right in here, which is only visible because we have the
transform active. If you click on a different
effect, it disappears. To have these
controls or to hide them under the project monitor, we have this little icon here. So if you click
on it, it's gone, click on it again,
we have it there. We also have little controls over here. We'll
look at that later. And, right, so this is where
it's going to end and stay. Now, I want it to start tiny in the cup and grow
out gradually. To do so, let's say, for example, over here, this is where it's going
to be its original size, so I'll add a
keyframe over here. Then I'll go back to
the beginning I'll temporarily disable the
fad in so we can see it. And over in the transform, I will drop the size
down to about here. So now if we play
back, you can see, it gradually scales up. Now, note that once we've
added this second keyframe, when we're scrubbing
through this, everything gets grade out. That is because you cannot
change the properties of transform or anything else
in between keyframes. There must be a keyframe for
you to change the values, and that's essentially
how that works. So we can also change the
opacity of this layer, this strip over here
directly from transform. So if, for example, let's
go to the keyframe. Opacity over here. At the end, we
want it to be 100. We could go to the beginning
and drop the opacity, and it would do something
similar to the fad in. But we'll leave
that to the fad in effect and just control the transform with
this transform. Now, I'll turn on the fad in
and see what it looks like. So first, I'll push
this back a little bit. Now, when you click on these keyframes to move them around, your playhead might start jumping to where
you're clicking. To disable this down here
in this little menu, we have this Hamburger option. If you're not seeing it, for
example, this is collapse, you have this little
arrow click on it, and you're going
to see the option. So in here, we have where
is it? Where is it? We have seek to
keyframe on select. If I enable this, when
I move a keyframe, the playhead is going
to follow it around. If you don't want
that, just go in there and uncheck this. So I'll push it further
out, and let's see. So what I'll do is over here, I'll add another keyframe. Now I can push this one further. So it starts a little
faster, then it slows down. Starts a little fast,
then it slows down. Now we can change the
interpolation of our keyframes. By default, they
are set to linear. So we have this
little triangle here. You have linear, so
it's going to move at a constant speed from one
keyframe to the next keyframe. Then we have discrete. Discrete essentially is a jump. So it's going to jump from this keyframe instantly
to this keyframe. That's to sable
the fade in again. So there's no transition.
It's just a jump. So that's what
discrete stands for. And then finally,
we have smooth. Smooth starts a little fast and then slows
down naturally. So we can use that for
this effect as such. Even push this second
keyframe back a little bit. And at the very beginning, I'll make it a little bigger so it doesn't start as small. Let's look. So
over here it's 34. So over here, I'll
make it 20. All right. I might even change
this second keyframe over here to smooth. Now, of course, you have
other options in here, which we'll be looking at later. So don't worry about those. You can change the
default keyframe type, however, to have it to
smooth all the time. We'll be looking at some
more advanced features of the effect strips, but just know that in here, you'll find just about
everything you could think of. So you have crop, which
allows you to crop. If you're not finding something, it could be under
a different name. You also have different
categories over here to help you identify
what you're looking for. So we have all of these
different sectors, stylized, motion, transform,
distort and such. Now, of course, not all the effects that we have
are in the effects stack. For example, to do the time remapping or change
the speed of a clip, you don't do it
using the effects. So not everything is in there. So things like stabilizing a clip or footage is done
directly in the project bin. You would right click on it,
then you would go to clip JOBS and you can
click on Stabilize, and it would stabilize the clip. You get a little pop
up. You can usually leave it to the default
and simply press Okay, it's going to create a
stabilized version of the clip. So one last thing when
it comes to effects, the order in which you place
the effects does matter, meaning, I'll grab
this clip over here. I'll save, scroll down. Let's add a transform to it. So I'll add transform,
I'll hide the key frames. And I'm going to scale this up. I've scaled it up quite a bit. Now I'm going to add
another transform. A stack up. The first
one applies first, the second one applies
second, so on and so forth. I'll disable the keyframes. Now I'm going to move
this to the side. And notice it's cut. We know that there's
more content, but it is cut right now. The reason for this is when we were zooming in
to the original clip, we have all of this information. So this first transform
has access to everything. After we zoomed in,
this result right here is what the second
transform is working with. So the order in which you put the effects really does matter. That means that
if I were to move this transform above
the scaling one, you see now we can move left and right and still
have access to all of the information because we're moving the original
image left and right, and then we're zooming in. And that's about it for effects. So in the next lesson,
we'll be taking a look at how to work with Audio
inside of Caden Live. I'll see you there.
14. Audio Mixing - Kdenlive Basics: Hi, and welcome
to this lesson on audio editing or rather working with audio
inside of Kaden Live. Alright, quick disclaimer. I'm not a sound engineer. I'm not a master
at mixing audio. I get by, I do my
sound reduction, compression, amplification,
in equalizer, if necessary. I do not do these
inside of Kaden Live. I do it outside of Caden Live. Alright, but that said,
let's jump right into it. The first thing I'll
do is, of course, unmute or audio track over here, and working with audio
is quite simple. You add the effects
the same way. So if we went to
the audio effects, you simply search for
what you want to add, let's say, a compressor,
for example. Now, if you don't know anything about audio or audio editing, it won't be too hard
to learn the basics. For example, we
have a compressor. We have the compressor and
then simple compressor. You can see it's inside
of volume and dynamics, and this would
essentially allow us to amplify the volume of our track. Although we don't
need to do that for the soundtrack right here, we have things like a limiter. The limiter would
allow you to set a volume cap that
it cannot go above. So you have different
options all available to you right
here inside of Kaden Live. For example, you could use the amplifier to
amplify the sound. We have amplifier mono stereo, and amplitude modulator, right? So you have a lot of
different options. So the most common one you
might end up using is, for example, volume,
and it's key framable. So you can control the volume of your track throughout
different parts. And that is exactly what
we're going to be using. So left click on it and drag it over our audio track and let go. We now have the volume control. The reason for this
is we're going to add this little
sound in our track, but we're not going
to add all of it. We're just going to add
up to a certain point. So if we go over here, playback. So starting here. So just to have the sound
of hot water being poured. So I'll go ahead and
set our endpoint, and I'll go over to here
and set our outpoint. I'll add it to the project bin. Now we can drag this in
and place it around here. Notice, it's very low. To fix this, we can use either the compressor
or the amplifier. So I'll try the simple
compressor here. And if we play back, so it
is bringing up the volume. So let's say we push
this up a little bit more, so 35. Okay. Then I'll shorten it and
I'll add a fade out, a very long fade out and
a very short fade in. So, yes, you add the
fade out and fade ins the same way you would
for video track up here. And if you wanted to
add a transition, so if you wanted a track to transition to another track,
you could, of course, add the fade out and
fade in manually or you could use the same
thing that we used above here. Let me unlock this track here, which would be to let
me remove the fade out, unable the soundtrack,
simply select your track, press U, and then you
would have this over here. So it gradually fades
out from the first one and then enters the second
one. So I'll remove this. Another method is simply
adding the fade out and fading he frames yourself
and making them match the difference in a way. Alright, so undo
this. I'll place our track down here again, right about here, and I'll
add the slight fading. We're going to lower the volume
of this track over here, which is why we added the
keyframe above volume. So I'll add a keyframe
here or move. You can also double click on the timeline to add
keyframes because we have the hight keyframe and timeline disabled, so
it's showing them. So I'm going to add the
next keyframe over here, and then finally one
last keyframe over here. With that done, you can change the volume right in here with the slider or directly on the timeline,
simply dragging these. And finally, I'll add a
fade outut to this track. Even though the volume is
going back up by the end, I'll still add the fade out. Now, if you want to separate the channels on your thumbnails,
like I have on mine, simply right click on the track so over where the name is, and check on separate channels. We can also activate this by default in Caden Live setting. We'll be looking at that
later in the course. Right? So that is it for audio, really. And if you remember, we've already mentioned
that you can control the volume of them inside
of the audio mixer. Master controls all the sound, and these two control the
individual tracks. All right. So in the next lesson,
we're going to put a pause on this project
just for a moment, and we're going to look
at some other features inside of Caden Live. And then we'll return
to this project, and we're going to finish it using some more
advanced features. But the process is
still going to be very simple. See you
in the next lesson.
15. Adding Text - Kdenlive Basics: Hi. As we've mentioned in the previous lesson,
for this lesson, we're going to take a
break from this project, and we're going to jump into some other features
of Caden Live. So the first thing
we're going to do now, this might seem a little
complicated for those of you who might not be used to this,
but don't worry about it. We're going to
click on sequences, the folder that we
couldn't delete. Then we're going to
go up to project in our menu bar and go
down to add sequence. We get a little pop
up. We're going to name this tracking. Alright. How many video tracks? Two, how many audio tracks? Two. Press Okay, and we're done. Now we have this sequence inside of sequences
called tracking. Next thing you might notice
is above our timeline here, we now have two tabs, one for sequence one,
and one for tracking. Now, this is where
you might run into some crashing if you push things a little
too fast or too hard. So we're going to go
at this a little slow. Make sure to save your project, and we're going to make sure
to go over to tracking. So we're going to add
text to our project. I'm going to grab the
first clip that we have up here and drop
it on the timeline. I'll go ahead and zoom
in to the clips length, but notice it no longer works. This tends to happen,
I've noticed once we start entering into
multiple sequences. So we'll zoom in manually. And this is our clip over here. We're grabbing the entire clip and putting it on the timeline. This is the whole clip, a
person walking on the beach. So we're going to add a
title above this person. And to add titles,
first things first, we're going to collapse
this, or click on empty space so I make
sure nothing is selected. And then I'll click
on this folder here with a plus to
create a folder, and I'll call this titles. You can call this
however you want texts, titles, words, whichever. I'll go ahead and make this 04, so we keep it in order. Next, with titles selected, I'll go into the menu up here, the dropdown menu, and I'll
go down to add Title Clip. It's going to open this
window over here for us. In here, you might not have
this check by default, but there's show background, which will show you what
is in the background, so visible on the timeline
where the playhead is, and now this can help
you position your text. So I simply left click once and it added this
little text box. If I left click again,
nothing happens, we would have to
go up here, grab the add text and
add another text. And each of these is
a different text. Let me remove the background. You can also change the color of this background over here so
I can switch it to black. Now we just have a black solid. You can also add a
few shapes inside, so we can add a rectangle change the color of the rectangle over here in this
menu on the right. Now notice it's over text. What if we wanted
to be behind rtex? Well, you have these
arrows up here, which allow you to control the
hierarchy of your objects. You can see here
it's Z index two. So it is two levels above. We can do over here is simply click on these arrows
to lower the object. We can also do it
manually over here. We have one to go all
the way to the bottom and one to just go step by step. All right. So we're not
really going to use this box over here, so
let's just delete it. Make sure to left
click on it so it's selected and press
delete, and that's it. I'll delete one of
the texts as well. Now to work with this text, double click on it, and now we can type in
whatever we want. I'll call this tracking. I'll switch this back to a checkerboard and
add the background, and I'll change the
color of the text. So inside of solid color, I'll choose something like a sort of bright
orange, more or less. It's Okay, and there you
have it. Still very small. We can change the scale of
the text with this over here. I'm simply going to scroll on the mouse wheel,
making it bigger. Then we have the font
that we want to use. You can use whichever
font is on your system. So I'm going to go with Gautam. Then I'll change it
from normal to black. Okay. We have a lot of
other options here. Some of them might
be evident to you. So, for example, underline,
italic or emphasis. We have this over here to
add custom characters, the special characters,
you could say, Ks. Then we have this
button over here, which we could switch to
a gradient color and we could edit the gradient of
our text over here, right? Or just use a solid color. We can also give it an outline
with this value down here. Let me remove the
line in the italic. We can choose the
color of the outline. So let's say we chose
a redder color. You can also pick a
color from the screen, so go anywhere here
and just pick a color. Or you can add custom color and it will add it to
the stack over here. That's Okay. I'll
remove the outline. I'll switch this back to
black and remove the outline. We can also add a
shadow to our text. We can control the
blur, the offset. So this is X, so left and right, and then this is Y up and down. Then you can also control the color of your
shadow, if you will. Finally, we can align the text. Will it be aligned left, align center or to the right? We also have some
animation that we can add to our text like
a typewriter effect. To see this, we'll have to
go over to the timeline. But essentially, you can
do it per character, per line or per word. In our case, we
only have one word, so we could do it per character. The frame step, the more frame
steps, the slower it goes. So how many frames does it take for each
character to show up? So let's say ten frames. You can simply create
title down here. We have a few templates
down here as well. Nothing too special. You can also adjust the fit
of this preview in here. You can also zoom to it. Zoom in, move left
and right. All right. Remember, we can add shapes, we can add images, we can
open documents in here. Then we have options
for background, and this would be a
general background. Animation, I don't play
with this too much, but essentially you
can animate the text. So add Edit Start Point. So it's going to
start here, right? Edit endpoint, it's
going to end here. You can also change
some features like is it going to zoom in
by the end, et cetera. Then you would create title, and it's going to have
this animation. So in this particular case,
I'll just create the title. Now, remember it's going to use the typewriter effect plus delete the animation
that we just added. So we get this weird
movement over there. So I'll delete this
one. Add another one. Although you don't
have to delete it, you can double click
on it and edit it, but I'll just start fresh. This time, I'll left click. I'll type in tracking. Let's do it all caps this time. Tracking. I'll leave it. I'll change the color. Alright. So I have the
word tracking over here. I'll simply leave
it at the center and press Create title.
Now we have our title. You can click drag and put it on the
timeline. Here it is. You can apply effects to it
the same way, add transition, so it goes from
visible to fading out. So the title clips basically work like video clips in a way, except that they have no
video, no footage, right? Alright. So that's
it for titles. And the next lesson,
we're going to learn how to track elements
inside of Caden Live, and we're going to
pair this up with the title. See you there.
16. Tracking - Kdenlive Basics: Hi. And welcome to this
lesson on tracking. We are simply going to make the title here Track
or person over here. So the first thing to do
is to track the person. So what I'll do is simply
go over to the effects. I'll make sure to be
on the video effects, or it could be on general, but I'll go to video effects, and then I'll start
typing tracking or track. So we have Motion Tracker. Since we have our
strip already active, we could simply
double click on it, and it will add the
motion tracker over here. Going to place this red square, which we can change the shape or you can go from rectangle to ellipse to arrow, right? So we place it over your target, but I'll go with the
rectangle over here. So I'm going to scale this down so it fits
around, let's say, the head of our character, which is what I want to
follow more or less. And for the tracker algorithm, we can leave it to KCF. There are some minor
differences between them. You can look it up in the
Kaden Live documentation, but KCF works great. Now, for the keyframe spacing, now this depends
on the amount of blurriness and the speed
of your footage, right? So the higher the blurriness
and the movements, well, you can get away with
a smaller value over here. The lower the movements, the more keyframe spacing. And next, we have the
shape with over here, so we can see it's a little
thick so we can make it thin this is mostly
for aesthetics, although you can render
this red circle out. Next, we have the blur. The blur really is for
inside the square. You want to blur the
content of the square. And the blur type right now is set to noun so we're
not seeing any changes. But if we switch
it, for example, to Gaussian blur, it is blurring everything inside
of this little square. So you can use the tracker to
blur sensitive information and not have to keyframe the movement manually
all the way. Okay, you can change the
color of the tracker as well. Just leave it to red and
switch the blur to none. Right. Now, once we
have the element that we want to track selected
inside of the square, simply click on Analyze
to apply effect. Give it a moment. It
is loading down here. Now, depending on your machine and the footage that
you're trying to track, the process might
take longer or less. It all depends. So we're
giving it a moment. Once the tracking is done, you'll see we get all of these keyframes
down here and all of these points representing the location of the
different keyframes. If we play back, you see it tracks or subject
quite well. All right. Except that by the
end our subject walks out of frame and the tracker
doesn't know what to do. We can fix that after.
We could also just delete those final keyframes
or go to the last one, push it off the frame.
There are many options. But for now, what we
want to do is extract the tracking
information so that we can apply it to our title. So if I grab the title
clip, drag it in, I'll make sure it expands over our entire footage because we want the word tracking to
be there the whole time. And now inside of motion
tracker, what we're going to do. So down under here
under our keyframes, we're going to click
on the Hamburger, and we're going to click on copy all keyframes to Clipboard.
Left click on it. We can disable this. We
can't even delete it, but we'll simply disable it. Now let's go over
to our title clip, and we're going to add a
transform effect to it. So I'll go inside of the
favorites, double click. And now we simply go to
the Hamburger, same thing. And this time we're going to say import keyframe from clipboard, and we're going to get
this funky looking graph. We don't have to play
too much with anything here other than the
data to import, which is just our rectangle. If you add more keyframes
copied to your clipboard, you could choose amongst them. But what we want to
change is, first of all, it's unchecked limit
keyframe number. We're going to remove
this. Next, we want to map the position, right? You could also map
the X position, so it only moves left and right, but then you wouldn't
be able to adjust the height of it unless
you add another transform. So it's up to you and what
you're trying to achieve. So I'm going to
go with position. For the position, you'll notice here that we have the
edge of our title, and it is mapped to the
top left of the rectangle, which we're not seeing here
because we disabled so what we're going to do is change
the map position to center, for example, and then change
the rectangle to center. And now it's going
to put the center of or title at the
center of the rectangle. And this is because our
text is at the center and not at the edge of the
image or anything of the sort. Now we need to adjust
the position and we can do this with the
position offset. So we simply have to move
this where we want it to be. So I'll go ahead and type in, let's say, negative 200. It's not enough, negative 300. That should work just fine. And then over here,
I'll put negative 70. Or move it back a
little bit more. Then we can simply press
Okay, and there you have it. We've transferred the keyframes
over to our tracking. So if we play back, let's disable the controls,
and we can see it. It is tracking or person. And by the end, of course, we know it's going to start doing some odd little things
like get stuck. And we can fix this
easily by either deleting those final
keyframes over here, right? Or by adding another
transform that we keyframe to go off
screen by that point. When imparting our
keyframes as well, we could have skipped some of
these keyframes over here. But anyways, like I said, another easy fix is just
add another transform. And once you get over
here, for example, add a keyframe and
then right after, add another keyframe and
push it off the screen. So that right there
is an option. So what we could do simply as
it's arriving around here. So we know she
walks out of frame, we can crop this out, crop it out to here, and simply add a fade out. That way, it disappears before it stops following
her. Now you have it. So all this to say that you can add another
transform and add different keyframes to that transform and
continue from there. Now, in the next lesson, we're going to learn
how we can export our project as a video file
or even image sequence, and right after that,
we'll dive into these more advanced features
as well as finish or add. I'll see you in the next lesson.
17. How to Render - Kdenlive Basics: Hi. In this lesson, we're going to learn how
we can export our project. Now, this is the unfinished
version of the ad, but let's say that this was done and we're ready to render. Also, there are several
reasons why you might render a video project
before it is done. In order to render, you simply have to go up to your menu bar, go to Project, and then
go down to render. Also have the keyboard
shortcut Control plus Return or
Control plus Enter. There used to be a render
button at the top here, which you can get by going to settings down to 2 bars shown, and then click on Extra Tobar and you'll get this
render button. I'll leave this off. And let's go ahead and render our project. So I'll go to Project render or simply use the
keyboard shortcut. Now, you'll get this little
pop up window over here. We have a few tabs at the top. We have the output file, and this is where you
choose the destination of your output as well as
the name of your file. You can access the file manager through this little
icon here on the right, simply left click on it. We can navigate to
the project folder, go inside of Renders, I'll click on this over here, and then I'll change the
name to V two and save. We've now set the location
and the name file. Next, we have our presets, which are the different profiles that we can use to render out or video or even our
audio or image sequence. You have different
formats for each of them or different extensions. You have video with Alpha. These tend to be slightly heavy, but you can render video
with transparent background. We have the image sequence and different formats
for it as well. We have loss list, which
does produce heavier files, but the export does not
suffer any loss of quality. Then we have the generic,
which is the default, so HD for web, mobile devices, et cetera. By default, it'll set
you to MP 4h264 AAC, which is good enough
for most renders. You also have few other formats. Then we have the ultra
high definition four k, which is for high resolution, but not the same as lossless, OTV definition,
if you need that, and finally, hardware accelerated,
which is experimental. Alright. Now, at
the bottom here, we have these different toggles, and the very first one full
project, let me push this up. Full project is referring to
anything on the timeline. Meaning, if this
clip was all the way here and we
chose full project, it would render our entire
content on the timeline, including this blink
space all the way to the edge of this
last audio clip. So let me undo this. Next,
we have the selected zone, and the selected
zone is referring to our in and out points
on the timeline. Now, notice at the bottom here, we have this little
blue pop up window, and it tells you the duration of your selected zone or
even the full project. If the value here does not match what you know that you've
selected on the timeline, simply left click on
the selected zone, so it activates and you will get the proper selected
zone timing up here. Next, we have the guide zone, and you could use
guides to determine the beginning and the
end of your render. And finally, we have
guide multi Export, which would allow you to use multiple guides to
export multiple files. So all from one
project all at once. And before we go
into more options, at the top of our presets here, we have the option to
create new presets. We can download presets online, and we can save our
current presets as new custom
presets. All right. So let's go ahead and
look at more options. So I'm going to
expand this window. And over here on the right, we have video at the top. So that means we're
exporting the video. You could turn this off and
simply export the audio. It would be the same
as using audio only, or it would be similar
to using audio. Inside of video, you have
render full color range. So instead of rendering
out eight bit color, we'd be rendering out, I
think it's ten bit color. We have render at
preview resolution. The little preview resolution
that you can set on your monitors here would
be used for the render. You have used proxy clips. So the resolution and quality of the proxy clips is what
you would use for render. And these options are
good for rendering quick demos to preview
your final project. Then we have the rescale. So right now we're
working at ten ADP. You could use the rescale to drop it down to a
lower resolution, and we have overlays which
allow you to put a time code, time code, non drop frame or frame number over your
video when rendering. Then finally, for the audio, we have the option to separate
file for each audio track, and this could be useful
when rendering, let's say, a movie or a scene with multiple different
languages or such. We have custom quality. Now I do think by default, this would be set to 75. You can uncheck this and simply use the
quality offered by the MP 4h264 AAC profile or whichever one
that you're using. Note that some of these options like the
custom quality are not available inside of the losslist because you do not get
to choose the quality. Loss list is simply
no loss of data. All right. For custom quality, you can choose different values. Lower values will give
you lighter files, higher values will give you slightly heavier files with
higher quality, of course. Now, we have the encoder,
and for the encoder, if you hover the cursor
over the hand over here, after the equal sign, you can see it says very fast. If you lower this, you can also see the
value here down here, presets medium, real time, increase it fast,
real time, et cetera. Now, the encoder,
the lower the speed, the lighter your file
might come out as, and the higher the speed. So the faster it encodes, the heavier your file
might come out as. Then you can choose
the amount of threads for the encoders to use. A good number might be 50% of your threads, so
half your threads. And finally, we have
parallel processing, which is unchecked by default, but I usually use it because it accelerates the render,
so less render time. They do let you know that this may cause render artifacts, but I have yet to see them, and you can also choose the
amount of threads to use. I think by default, it'll
show four for most machines. And well, that
works fine for me. Now finally, we have these last checkboxes at
the bottom here. We can export the
metadata that we could set at the
beginning of the project. You can also edit the metadata from here, add your information, and you can see here we same little window for
creating our new project. All right. So you can also
add more fields, et cetera. We can open the
folder after export. So the folder where
we rendered out our project would then
open after we export. And finally, we can
play after render. Down here, we have
the parameters of the selected profile. Alright, so that's about it. All we have to do now is
simply hit render to file. A select selected
Zone. Render to file. I then switches over
to the job queue. You can have multiple
jobs in here. You can abort the job as well. It lets you know where
it's going to export to, the amount of time left, the amount of frames
that have been rendered, and at which FPS it's going. So how fast is it going?
Now we have script. You can create custom
scripts for custom renders. Once our render is finished, we get the time that
it took to render. We can see here it
took 23 seconds to render these 16 seconds
with the effects and all. And finally, we have
a Share button. Right now, there are only
two options down here, but there are ways of adding some more options such as
some social media platform, so you could have YouTube
in there directly. And right, so that is it. I'll close out of
this. If we were to make our way to
our project file, go inside of Renders, we now
have the Night Owl Brew two. Alright, so that is
it for this lesson. I'll see you in the next lesson.
18. Remove Green Screen - Kdenlive Basics: Hi. In this lesson, we're going to learn how to key out some green
screen or blue screens, and we'll be doing it
with the Chroma key. Now, it's a very
straightforward process. All I did over here is
create a new sequence, which I called keying so that we could do the
keying over here. So inside of images, we have a computer here
with a green screen. This is what we'll be
using for the keying. You could apply the key to it directly inside of
the project bin. You simply make sure
that this is selected. So the computer with
a green screen, go to effXs, type in key. And then you have Chroma key Advance and
Chroma key Basic. For now, we'll just
use Chroma key Basic. You also have key spill mop up, which could be to clean any
leaks from the green screen, let's say in a
footage, for example. And as I said, we have
Chroma key Advance, which offers a lot more
options than Chroma key basic. Now, notice I simply
double clicked on it, and inside of this
stack over here, it is actually
representing the effects stack of this image over here
inside of the project pen. So the Chroma key is
very straightforward. All disable the key frame. Simply pick the color from in here or grab
the color picker, go on your screen, grab the
green, and there you go. That is just about it. Then you can play with the
variants. Here when necessary. Now, inside of the view monitor, we're not seeing the preview, but if I were to drop this
over on our timeline, we would then get
a black background because we've keyed
out the screen. Alright. So that
is if you want to apply it directly
inside the project bin, if not, we can grab this, drop it on this computer, and delete this over here. Now we have it on the computer. Okay. And from here, really place anything
you want behind. So let's go inside of our
footage, for example, I'll grab this cup
of coffee or put it underneath our key or
underneath our computer. And now you have the cup of coffee playing under the
computer right here. Now, of course,
the aspect ratio, the scale of the image here does not fit our entire
composition. That's fine. Don't worry about it. So you could add a transform
at this point, place this however you want, sce it down to fit inside of the screen completely
all up to you, right? So this is maybe the easiest
thing we've had to do. Now we have our footage playing
inside of our computer. Of course, ske it to
match this image or scale this image to match
the video over here. Alright, it is that simple. Now, with the variance, this is really for how much of the green
is it looking for. So a higher value, it's
going to start spilling out more and more because
it's exaggerated, a lower value is
going to try to stick closest to this value of
green and not the variations. So just put this at a comfortable amount here
to hide these little edges. Over here, you might
want to work with a higher resolution to really
make sure a higher quality, to make sure that you're
not missing any details. We're not using any
proxies on these images. So there you have
it. The keying, very straightforward process. There's not much more to it. Okay, so that is it
for this lesson. And the next lesson, we're
going to learn how to otoscope instead of Cat
and Live. See you there.
19. Rotoscoping - Kdenlive Basics: Hi. In this lesson, we're
going to learn how we can otoscope elements
in our footage, or images inside
of Kid and Live. So all I did was create a new sequence
called the otoscope, and we'll go ahead and use this hand holding
a cup over here. Simply left click
on it, drag it onto the timeline, and
there we have it. Next, let's go to effects. And let's go look up Roto. Sorry, that. Otoscope. There
we go. We have two options. We have Rotoscoping and
we have Rotoscoping mass. So for this, we're going
to grab Rotoscoping. We can left click drag
and drop it on our clip. Selected, we now
have rotoscoping. And over here we have the mode, the Alpha operation.
We can invert. We can add a little bit
of fetter fettering, so a little bit of
blur to the edges. We have the fettering passes. So you could have a small
width of the fetter, but with enough passes
that it gives you a smoother fettering,
you could say. Then we have the keyframes, which will be very
useful at this point. And when it comes
to rotoscoping, make sure that you have show height edit mode turned on
so you show the edit mode, because if we uncheck this, you'll see we don't
get the points or the indication that we can do anything with
this rotoscoping. So I'll turn this on if you take the cursor off the
project monitor, you get this little
yellow box over here. Click to add points and
right click the close Image. So you want to left
click so you can add points and then right
click when you're done. Now, here's a little copy at. If I were to add my
points here, okay? I'm adding points
for my selection. I'm not doing the
refined one right now, simply a demonstration. Then if you don't close it
and you move on the timeline, you lose your selection
automatically. So if you scroll by accident
or anything of the sort, you will lose your selection. So that is very
unpleasant, you could say. Now, let's go ahead and
add a keyframe instead, and let's start doing the
same thing we were doing and then scroll and notice
you lose it as well. So that's one of the
caveats of this operation. If something goes wrong, you're simply going to lose the keyframes that
you worked on. You can zoom in to the
project monitor here, simply hit the Zoom
button up here. Let's zoom in. You can use
the scroll bars over here. Now remember, if you
click or left click on the project monitor,
it's going to play, and if you haven't
closed your keyframes, it's simply going
to remove them, which is quite
annoying, honestly, but you can still
otoscope, really. So now, let's say you want it to match the curve over here. Another piece of advice
before we get into that, always make sure that
your selection is slightly in and
not slightly out. It's better to be ever so slightly what you want to
select versus outside of it, unless you plan on
inverting this. But ether ways, let's go
ahead and make our selection. And let's say you
want it to match these curves over here. Well, to do so, it's only once we've closed our selection. Can we add or can we
interact with the nodes, the handles, sorry, that would
allow us to make curves. So for now, we can only
do these straight lines. And then you would
simply make I guess, a rough selection or fine selection that
you're going to have to refine afterwards either way. So it takes a bit of work. I said, the very first one's
going to be rough because we can't add the curves
for a selection. But later, after we're done
doing all of our keys, we'll be able to go in and add the curves that we need to
follow all of these fingers. 'til we get over here, and now we simply right click
and it does the selection. Once we've right clicked, you'll notice the whole
background has disappeared. We can zoom in a
little bit more here. And now we get these handles that allow us to do the curves. Okay? And you could
technically switch this to where is it? Add, right? Switch this to add, and you'll be able to see
your image behind so you can more easily
curve the mask or yeah, the selection, if you will. That's essentially
it. We would simply go in and refine our selection. We're not going to finish
this one completely. It would be a game of patience
and some tedus process. If you hold down Control on
a PC and you left click, you can pan around. But remember, if you left click and you're not
holding control, and you haven't
closed your mask, it will remove all the points
that you've already added. Okay. But here we
go. We have this. Now we can switch back
to white on clear. Then we can add the fettering. As you can see, it
just adds a big blur. Then the fettering
passes, fettering with. How big is the fettering? Fettering passes, how smooth, like, how much processing
power goes into it. So let's drop the fettering. Let's say, all the
way down to two, and then we put two passes. And as I said, you can add
keyframes over here in now, if we're working with footage, you would add multiple
keyframes and track the movement that's happening in the footage that you
want to otoscope, and that's how you go about it. So add keyframes
and move it around. Now, the other thing is, you can add multiple
otoscope layers here. And let's say for this one,
I'll make sure it's selected. I'll create another
selection here random. Now, it's overriding
this up here, right? If you go down to
Alpha operation and you switch it to add, it will add this mask to this
previous mask over here. If you were to switch
it to subtract, and we can move this mask the selection here with this
little X in the middle. So click on it and
move it around. You'll see that
the subtract will subtract this mask out of this. And then you have these other
options, minimum, maximum. So an intersection
between the two, you could say, white on clear. Alright, and I'll
just delete this one, and there we have it. So if we turn this there
are little errors, and it's not curve or it
should be everywhere, but this is how
you can work with Rotoscoping inside
of Kit and Live. Now, just remember to put it to the max quality when using Rotoscoping because
you really want to see these edges clearly
when working with it. Now I'll zoom back out over
here, and there we have it. Alright, so that is
it for this lesson. And the next lesson,
we're going to take a look at the Kit
and Live settings. So we'll go to settings and configure KD and
Live. See you there.
20. Configure Kdenlive - Kdenlive Basics: Hi there. In this lesson, we are going to take a look at Kat and Live settings and learn how to
configure KD and Live. This will be a brief overview. We won't get too much in depth. So let's get started.
First things first, we go up to our menu bar and
we go inside of settings. All the way at the bottom, we
have Configure Kaden Live, and you also have a keyboard
shortcut for it over here, Control plus Shift plus coma. So this is the configuration
menu over here. It's a little pop up window. We get different tabs on the left or different parameters. Let's start with the
top one here, Misk. Now, we get quite
a few checkboxes. These mostly have to do with the default settings
when importing media. But all the way at the top here, we have this very
important checkbox, which is the active
crash recovery autosave. Make sure it is checked on, and it should be
checked on by default, so it should already be
checked on, basically. Alright, on top of that, we have the open last project on Startup. That's up to you. And for clip Import, if you remember when we
were importing our clips, this is where you can set
some of these options. Like, the first checkbox up here has to do with the pop up that we would get when
importing or video or media. If you don't want the
checkbox, just uncheck this. If you were to import a piece of media that had multiple
audio streams, you would get a pop up
letting you choose how many of these streams you
would like to import. If you simply want
to import all of them by default,
simply check this on. Next, we have the automatically
import image sequences. This is checked on
because we checked it on when we were
importing our media. Same goes for Ignore sub
folder structure down here. It is checked off because we had not checked it on in there. If we check it on in here, it's going to affect the other vice versa
they're connected. Now, you have the tab position. So remember, each segment
has multiple tabs, and you can choose the
position of those tabs, bottom, top, left, right, et cetera, and this dropdown. And finally, we have the preferred track
compositing composition. You can leave it to Auto. Just note that QT blend works best when there is no
compositing on the timeline, and this one over here
works ever so slightly better than QT blend if there is compositing
on the timeline. That's about it. Next, we
have the project default. So this is simply
the default settings when opening up Kid and Live. And these are the same settings
that we had to set up, creating a new project. So you pick the profile that you want by default,
the frame rate, you pick where you want
the case files to be safe, default location or parent
folder or custom location. How many video audio
tracks, et cetera. Same things. You can create new profiles, so
on and so forth. Next, we have the proxy clips, which we touched
on very briefly. So if you plan on
using proxy clips, you can just enable this
in the configurations. You can also automatically
generate proxy clips for well, you set a size cap, which will automatically
generate the clips. You can do the same
for images as well. For videos, you could
maybe set it to automatically make proxy clips if you import four K footage. You can set the size of your proxies and choose
the encoding profile. We'll learn more
about how to choose the proper profile in a moment. Next, we have the timeline. So a few settings for
the timeline down there. If you want to automatically
separate your audio tracks, you can do it with this
third check box over here. The two top ones are simply for the thumbnails for
audio and video. For playback and seeking, if you're playing
back and you click anywhere so you seek
somewhere else, the playback will pause. So if you don't like that,
you can uncheck this, and you have these other
options here for the playback. So jump the timeline start if playback starts
at the last frame. KNN Live does not
do this by default. You have to manually push the
playhead to the beginning. So if you don't
want that, simply check this on, and that's that. And a few more options. And you also have the
option to choose the height of your tracks down
here. Alright. Next inside of tools, all there is in here for me
is options for the subtitles. Yes, Gating Live offers some
great subtitles features, and it's very customizable. Feature extensive,
you could say. Next for environment, this
is where you could set the default location
for temporary files, capture folder because you can do screen capture with Can Live, where some codex stuff
goes, et cetera. And you can choose the amount of threads when
working with proxies, low CPU priority when
working with proxies, your cache data limit,
so on and so forth. Now, for colors and guides, you can change the
color of your clips. So your audio
thumbnail, for example, you can change the color
here to preferred color, monitor overlay color,
monitor background color. Next, we have the
speech to text. Yes, skating Live can
turn speech into text, and it uses some
AI speech models. You can download them from here. The instructions are very
straightforward, honestly. You have two options up there, you can research and find
out some more about them. Next, we have the playback. Now, I would not really
advise changing any of these settings unless you
really know your configuration, your machine, and
what you're doing. For capture, these
are the settings for, again, capturing your screen, if you're using black
magic hardware, your audio settings, et cetera. For the jog shuttle, this is referring to
these devices over here. And finally, you have the
transcode profile. All right. Now, if you've made any changes
that you'd like to keep, simply click on
Apply and then Okay. If not, you just click on Cancel or Okay and they
will not be applied. You can also restore to
default. Apply Okay. There we have it. Next, how to choose the transcode profile
when working with proxies. Let's go up to your project, down to project settings,
go to your proxy. And inside of the proxy tab, you have the encoding
profile over here, and to the right of
it, the first icon. This allows you to compare proxy profiles
efficiency. Click on it. Let's scale this up
ever so slightly. You can test proxy profiles, and what it will do is, well, test different profiles,
and it'll give you the render time and the file size for the
different profiles. This will help you
choose which one works best for your machine
and for your needs. And there we have it.
So close out of this. Cancel. After that, we
have inside of settings. Next inside of settings, we have Run Config
Wizard dot dot dot. Inside of this window here, simply click on Check
hardware acceleration. It will check your system and pick the option that's
available to you, if any, now this little blue box up
here is simply letting me know that there
is the media info missing, but this is optional. Don't worry about that.
If you see it as well. Once it's done, simply press
on Okay. There you have it. You also have inside of settings the color scheme, the style, and the icon theme, which you can force
upon Katan Live. And then finally, we can configure the keyboard
shortcut down here. In most cases, you can hover the cursor over one
of these icons. I'll give you the name of
it or some information, which you can use
to find it in here. Right. So that is it for
Caden Live configurations. In the next lesson,
we're going to finish the ad, starting
with sequences. Then we'll add
some final effects until we reach picture lock. And from there,
we're going to do some color correction and
color grading. See you there.
21. Zoom Out Transition - Kdenlive Basics: Hi. In this lesson, we'll be learning
how to create this zoom out transition and add the final touches to our
previously created transition. Alright, let's get started. We're going to delete this
transition over here, so let's delete this. And we're going to focus
on this clip over here to add our Zoom out effect first, and then we'll focus
on this clip over here for the second part
of the transition. Starting with this first clip, I have a custom made effect stack over
here for this effect. So it's made up of a box blur, a transform, two mirrors,
another transform, then we add two more mirrors, and then finally two
last transforms, and it gives you
this effect here. Now, it's very blurry
because we're working with a proxy clip and we're at
a low preview resolution. Now, for this effect to work, we're also going to duplicate
this clip over here. So in order to delete all
of these effects all at once and not have to click
through them individually, or right click on this clip and I'll go to Delete effects. Alright, then I'll hold
down Alt on the keyboard, and I'll press the left
arrow just to place the playhead over here at
the edge of this clip. If in your case, for example, when you hold down Alt
and you press left, it jumps all the way to the
beginning or somewhere else. It could simply be
because the V one track is not enabled as an active
track, you could say. It has to do with this little green button here
over the V one. Alright, so I'll go
back to our clip, hold down out, press left. Then I'll right click
on it. I'll go to Copy. I'll make sure that this
top track is active. You can either
click on it or use the up and down arrows to
change clips. Alright. So with this clip active
or press Control plus V, so I can paste the copy
of this clip down there. For the moment, I'll go ahead
and hide this top track, and let's focus on
this bottom one here. So the first thing we'll
add is the transform. We have it in the
favorites. Double click. We have the Transform. Now
for the very first transform, we can disable the keyframes
and all we have to do is zoom or rather scale
the size down to 50%, so right 50, press
enter a return. Then we're going to use
the align keys over here so we can align
this image to the right, click on Align right,
and then at the bottom, click on Align bottom. Then I'll check on
this stort up here. Next, inside of our effects, we can look for mirror. The book click.
We're going to need to mirror effect,
so add another one. Now, the top mirror will be
horizontal, collapse this. The bottom mirror
will be vertical. Okay. Now we'll add
another transform. We'll disable the keyframes,
check on distort, and we're going to scale
this down to 50% as well. And we're going to align it at this bottom right corner again, so align right and
then align bottom. Now we can add two
more mirror effects, and the bottom mirror
effect will be vertical. So we can collapse these. Now we're getting
closer to what we want. But we have four repetitions. What we want are
three repetitions. This is why we add
this transform here, disable the key frames as well, enable the start and
scale this up to 133. Once you press Enter,
you're going to get a 132 point something. As cading Live has some issues
with non rounded numbers. So for this one, we're
going to align it to the left and then to the top. Now we only have three
repetitions of our footage. Okay. And this is where the final transform
comes into play. We add our final transform. For this one, we'll leave
the keyframes active. We'll click on this
Stort and we'll scale this up to 300%. And there you have it. So if we enable our top
footage over here, you can see they are
aligned nicely. All right. The reason why we
have this top one is also because this bottom one, even though let me go ahead
and I'll right click on it, go down to clip and Project Ben, right click the Sable the proxy. I'll take a moment to load. Okay, so let me
Okay, there we go. So even though here,
it looks pretty sharp. Let me up the preview
resolution as well. It looks pretty sharp,
but it is still slightly blurry compared to
the original clip, which is at Frees. And the reason for this is
simply that we are zoomed in at 300% here for this clip. So you don't really have to
do this since we are working with four k clips in
a ten ADP Canvas. But this can help you preserve
the quality of the image. Alright, so I'll turn on
the proxy clip again. Now, what we need to do now
is to add our key frames. So I'll hold down out and press the right arrow
key so I can go to the end of this clip over here, and then I'll go back 12 frames. 12. Then I'll add a
keyframe over here. Now, my keyframes
right now are rounded, and this is because I change the default keyframe
type to smooth. You don't have to do this.
You can change them manually. So we have a keyframe over here. We'll click the right arrow over here to jump to
the end and we'll add another keyframe and we'll
scale this down to 100. All we are missing here
would be the box blur. Let's go ahead and simply
put it at the top. We'll make sure to set
both values here to zero. We can open the
transform down here to use the arrows to
jump to the keyframes, add a keyframe up here, so click jump to the end,
add another keyframe. So by the end here, we want
a small percentage of blur. Now, because we are on a
preview and using proxy, this is not really what
the blur is going to look like on the full
resolution clip. So if you want to
see that, you'll have to disable the proxy. But for this, you can do the fine tuning once
we reach picture lock. So let's say 20%
for vertical and horizontal and at this
keyframe, it's 00. All right. That's it.
We've created the effect. Now we have our keyframes
and the effect itself. We can click on
these two disc up here to save effect
stack dot dot dot. Simply left click on it. We'll get this
little pop up here, name it, however you
want to name it. So Zoom out transition. Give it a description,
whatever you want. So mirrors and transforms. Simply click on Okay. And if you go to
the fourth option here on top of effects, let's clear the search box. Inside of custom, we now have the Zoom out transition
that we just created. You can right click on it
to change the information. You can also export
it as an XML. There are ways to
import these and you can import them inside of
these templates over here. All right. So that is
it for the first part. Now, with our clip on top, all we have to do is add a
transform effect as such. And with our bottom
clip selected, it'll make it easier to jump to the keyframes if we use
the keyframes down here. We'll add a key frame to this. Let's jump to the end,
add another keyframe, and at the end
keyframe over here, we're going to scale down 33%. Let's enable our track up here. And you can see it zooms out with a nice seamless
effect, close enough. Now, the only thing
is that we're missing the blur up here. We can simply grab
our bottom clip, click on the box
blur, drop it on it. Left click, hold drag
and drop it on it. Let's move this above the transform, and
there we have it. You can see that the blur
is a bit strong, however. So for this top clip,
the blur effect, I'm going to drop
it down very low, so it still gets a bit of blur, but not as much as
the surrounding. Matter of fact, even for the
surrounding ones over here, I would lower the
blur a little bit. And in this case, you would have to save the effects stack again or change the blur each time you apply
it to a new clip. Now, to address the
second clip over here, we're going to add
a transform, okay? And then we're going to go to our effects or video effects
and we're going to look for lens correction over
here, the book click on it. And now we're going to check on distort for the transform. We're going to
create our keyframe. So at the very beginning, we have our very first keyframe, and we're going to
move 12 frames in. So 12, and we're going
to add a keyframe. So this is how we
want it at the end, and at the beginning,
we're going to zoom in considerably. And for this part, we
can use some guides or some indication
on the viewport, so we can align this
shot more or less. With this shot. So to do so, we'll go on our project monitor. We'll go at the top here. The second option on this
grid says change overlay. Click on it once, twice, three times, and
there we have it. So if we move by the end, we can see that her head is
on this top left quadrant. So for this one over here
at the very beginning, I will put her head at
a similar spot as such, even though she's zoomed in. I'm simply left click holding, and I'm sliding,
there we have it. So it's going to go from let
me change this to smooth. At. Okay. Now, we can add a
box blur to this one as well. But before we do so, we're going to play with the
lens correction down here. What we want is the
lens correction keyframe both. So same thing. Let's open the transform. Let's jump to this keyframe, add the keyframe, collapse this. So at this point, it
will be back to normal. But in the very beginning,
we're going to push the center correction
in a little bit, and then the edge correction
ever so slightly. So that way, it has this nice
bendy effect on the edges. Okay. Now we can apply the same effect here,
this lens correction, key framable to this as it's zooming out to create this
lens spending effect. But we're not going
to do it now. We're going to do this
in the next lesson once we learn about
nested sequences. So now that we have this, let's add the transition
between this clip on the right and our clip over here. And this
is a simple one. Let's go to the
compositions tab. Let's go and look for push, just like we had it before. We're going to grab push left. We're going to drop
it right over here. Now we can push it as such,
whatever length we want. I'm going to expand
this top clip over here for the push and
drop it like there. I'll change the keyframe
to smooth for this one. You know, push the
keyframe to the end, make sure it completes
the transition. So we have this push over here, we adjusted the values
of the keyframes, making sure the last
one is all the way to 1,000, first one to zero. I changed the interpolation over here of the first keyframe. We get this
transition over here. And the next lesson, we're
going to learn how we can convert this into
a nested sequence, and we're going to
add the final touches to it. Alright, see you there.
22. Nested Sequences - Kdenlive Basics: Hi there. In this lesson, we're going to learn
how we can create nested sequences inside of
Kaden Live. Let's get to it. So if you want to get rid of this overlay on your
project monitor up here, simply go to the little menu on the right here and
click on Overlay once, twice, three times,
and there you go. It's gone. So last time we
left this effect like this, and we said we're going
to nest this sequence. So last time we created certain sequences
like the tracking and the rotoscope so we could do these different
effects on them. So it's like having different projects within one project. You can also import the
sequences onto other sequences. So basically, I could
grab the tracking here, left click hold and drag it
into this sequence over here, and we would have this
tracking track in here. Now, there's no audio on it. If you double click on
the sequence itself, it will open the tab. You see here there is no audio, but we have audio tracks, and this is why it's importing
it with an audio track. To create nested sequence,
however, Zoom accordingly. All you have to do is select all the clips that you want to include into the
nested sequence. In this case, it would be
this clip over here of the lady drinking
coffee, this transition. So you can hold down Shift and click on each of them or simply hold down Shif and click
drag over all of them. We have all of them
selected. Right click. Then go down to create
sequence from selection, choose the amount of
tracks that you want for this and they
need two tracks, two video tracks minimum, either way because
we are working with two video tracks even here. For this effect work, we
don't need any audio tracks. You can call it
however you want. So we can call this
the Zoom transition. Press Okay, and it will add the sequence that
we just created. So the Zoom transition in the place of our previous
clips over here. Now, sometimes there
are some bugs, some errors that
happen with the clips, and sometimes all it takes is restarting gating live
to fix the error. But if really it's
giving you issues, one thing you can do is go over to Zoom transitions,
for example, okay? You can see your project
needs more tracks. I'll handle all streams, also for this over here. So we can add the tracks
that it's asking for, although it's not
necessary, it might help. We add a track. Okay.
So what we could do is come in here,
hold down shift, left click, hold, drag
over all of these, press Control C or right
click and go to copy. Go back to our sequence, make sure that the playhead is at the beginning
of our sequence. Wherever our sequence fits, these clips will fit as well. Then you could
delete the sequence, press Control V, and
add these back in. And if you want, you can
delete this sequence, the Zoom transition
up to you. All right. So once a sequence
has been deleted, however, it cannot be undone. But I mean from the project
bin, not from the timeline. Hold down chip, grab all
of these, delete them, or grab the Zoom transition
and drag it back in. Right? We haven't we added in Audio
track or undo this or grab the video and just drag
this in over here. All right. So here we have it. We have our effect
here together. And now we can add
a single box blur. So if you go in here,
grab our box blur, we can add a single box blur and simply map it to
the timing of this. So right over here,
I'll add a keyframe, then I'll move to about the middle here, add
another keyframe, and then move to when
this clip ends like such to where the transition ends and add one last keyframe. So I'll make sure that
these two keyframes over here are set to zero, so as well as this
very first keyframe, because the box blur
starts with 1%. So just make sure they'll
drop it down to zero. Then we can grab this
middle keyframe here, this one right here, and add a bit of
horizontal blur to it. So unlike the method
from earlier, we're not getting a straight
cut line in the middle because now these two are
considered as a single track, so the nested track down here. And that's really
it. Now we've just managed to add our blur. The first blur comes
in a little too soon, so I'm going to push this
keyframe in a little bit more. We can do it directly
from the timeline or from the effect. And I want this to the blur
to disappear a little sooner. Okay. Okay. Maybe I'll lower
the blur a little bit. As such, add a tiny
bit of vertical blur, and even less than that,
and we'll have our effect. All right. Now we can also add the lens correction key framable to our nested
sequence over here. So that at this ending part, so I'll hold down all,
press the right key. Can see it ends here, which seems off, but I'll
click to go to the end. I'll add a keyframe, then I'll move back 12 frames,
so one, two, three, four, five, six, seven,
eight, nine, ten, 11, 12, and I'll add
another keyframe. And at this last keyframe here, I'm going to add a little
bit of this warping. So I'm going to move
the center correction in the edge correction a bit. As such, let's see here.
Let's say like this. Now, if we look at it, we get this Zoom effect real quick. And there we have it. Now,
it seems a little snappier. So that's essentially
how sequences work. Now, for example, if you are on a sequence that
you want to delete, Kaden Live will crash. There are certain abrupt actions done with sequences that do cause a bit of bugging or that could
cause Caden Live to crash. But other than that, when
they work, they work nicely, and it's not
difficult to recover what's inside of them
if you have the tab. Alright. That is it
for this lesson. In the next lesson,
we're entering picture lock where we're
going to remove our proxies and do some color mostly color grading for this,
and that's about it. Alright, so I'll see
you in the next lesson.
23. Color Grading - Kdenlive Basics: Hi, and welcome to this color grading
lesson in Caden Live. Okay, so the first thing we're going to do before we jump into the color grading
is make sure we reach picture lock
so that everything, nothing is going to get
changed from this point on. And the only things I
can think of changing is how early the logo
starts to appear. I want it to start
appearing a lot sooner, maybe reach its last position or its first position
a little faster. Something like
this. Alright, and then I'm going to push
this in a little bit more. Now, at this point, we can go to our footage. The first one is from
a different track, so we don't have to
bother with this one. So we'll grab the second one. Hold down Shift, click
on the very last one. All right, click on it, and
I'll disable the proxy clips. It'll take a moment, so
everything goes back to full resolution.
And there we have. At this point, if
you want to get smooth playback with
all of these effects, how heavy it might
be on your machine, so on and so forth, you have this little play
button here above the timeline, which allows you to
create a preview render. You can create different
preview render zones which are made using
the in and out points. So you can create in
and out points in certain areas to create
different preview zones. You can use the proxy
clips for previewing. For this stage of our edit, you wouldn't use the
proxy clips to preview. You can set it to
automatic preview, so it's always updating
the preview areas. And finally, once you have a timeline preview,
you can also delete it. So for this over here, let's say we don't
really need it, but I'll go ahead
and activate it. So I'll click on Review zone. So with that out of the way, the next thing to do
is to start adding our effects to our clips
for the color correction. In this particular case, all of our clips are
on a single track. If you had clips on
multiple tracks, adding effects could become
a little bit more tedious, by the way, you can see we now
have a green line up here, and if we playba, let me turn off the sound. We're getting a smooth playback, 24 frames per second, no lag. So for this particular project, we have everything
on a single track. Or other projects,
you would normally you will likely have clips
on different tracks. Now, of course,
you could compact everything into a
single sequence, and then you can
add your effects to that single sequence or
multiple different sequences. So there are many
ways to go about it, but let's go ahead and learn the hierarchy of
the effects from Project Ben to clips on the timeline to entire
tracks to master. And yes, that is the
order in which it goes. If you apply effects to your clip from the project
bin, it applies first. It applies everywhere
that you use those clips. You can then apply effects directly to your clips
in the timeline. These apply after the
ones in the project bin. Next, you can apply your effects to the tracks themselves. So inside of a track,
you can add effects, so it affects everything
on the track, and these apply after
the effects on the clip. And then finally, you
have master where you can apply some effects to
your to the master, which will affect absolutely
everything on the timeline. Of course, video effects will only affect
footage and images, and audio effects will only affect audio tracks.
All right, then. So what we want to do with these clips is to make it look a little bit more like nighttime. We can apply the
effects directly to the track since everything
is on a single track. And we don't want our color grading to affect
the logo anyways. So I'll grab the
track, so click on it. I'll go to effects, and the
very first one that we're going to use is exposure. So you can left click hold
drag it onto the track or simply with the track
selected, double click. Now, you might notice
that our preview area has turned red again, and that is because
it recognizes that a change has been made to
this entire area here. So we don't really need
any keyframes here, so disable the keyframes. We can find any
one of our clips. Let's drop the exposure here. So significantly, we want
to remove the highlights, make the simila dimmer, all lower the radius
ever so slightly, and we can look or scrub
through a timeline to see how it is responding
with everything. Okay? Next, we're
going to add contrast. So let's search for contrast. We have color contrast,
and we have contrast. We're just going
to grab contrast, turn off the key frames, and I'm going to increase
the contrast a bit. So now, next, we're going
to drop the saturation. So let's search for
saturation, grab saturation, turn off the key frames,
and we're going to drop the saturation
significantly. Not too much, though. We
also want to keep some Colors in there. Okay.
Now, for example, this clip over here, this particular clip could
use some effects applied to it separately to really dim down some of the
brightness around. Next, we're going
to look for curves. So right curves. We could use Bzier curves, but curves, the normal curves will
work just fine as well. So double click at the curves
or collapse saturation. We're going to start with Luma and we're going to drag this
top right corner point here, so left click hold
and drag it down. To a certain point.
Then we're going to hover the cursor
over the line. So next to the point, left click hold and push it up ever so slightly
over to the left. Then we can click
further down the line. Left click hold and drag it up a little bit
before and after. So we're reducing the
strong highlights. We're going to add another
curves adjustment here, and in the channels drop down, we're going to go for red, and we're going to reduce
the reds from our image. So simply left
click on the curve and drag it to the
right and down, or you can simply
drag it to the right. Okay? So we're trying to knock the reds out, not too much. Certainly around the
highlights a bit. So the highlights are at the top right and the shadows
are at the bottom left. That's a rough way of putting
it, but more or less. Okay? And we're going
to add another curves. And this time we're
switching to blue. And we're going to click in the middle and drag it
up ever so slightly. So we add a bit of a blue
tint to our image here. Now, there are some more advanced
things that we can do to it, but we're going for an
easy night ish look. This clip, as I said, could use its own personal effects to really try and dim
down those lights. But once you have the
sky and you're shot, it's hard to make it
look like nighttime. Let's say we didn't want any of these effects to touch
this clip over here. So the clip holding the Okay, how would we go about this? Now, there is one way. It would be slightly
tedious at this point, but it would be to use what
is known as the effect zone. So this pogo next to the
I to disable our effects. So to the left of it, you
have use effect zone. If you click on it,
let me go ahead and disable our other
effects for a moment. So I'll click on exposure,
so it is active. And you see this pink
line at the top here, that is the effect zone. And essentially what it does, it determines where this
exposure effect takes place. So what percentage or what areas of the
timeline does it affect? So you can see here this
point of the cup is bright. Once we touch the pink area, it is dark because it's
being affected by exposure. So for this particular one, we won't be using
the effect zone. So if you wanted to avoid this
affecting this last clip, we can simply move it
to a different track. So right click on
the V one, say, insert track, one track,
video track above. You can give it a
name if you want, press Okay and you create
this new track over here. And we're using this transition. So the Luma spiral. Once we move our cup above, it will eliminate the
transition that we had. For this over here,
all we'd have to do is extend this clip
in a little bit more. We can also push the
cup in, if you want. Click on transition, or on wipe. Let's switch over to Luma so you can type in
Luma. Click Luma. You can leave it on automatic. We're going to go down to spiral let's check if it's
working the way we want it to. We're going to have to
invert, and there we have it. This clip over here,
as I've mentioned, this lady with the
clip selected, let's go to effects. And let's look for levels. We're going to grab levels, not color levels, just levels. If you double click on it, it will add it to the effects
and composition stack, and it is applied to
this clip over here. You can see it now has
a little star on it, and the star represents that an effect is active
on it, right? So we can hide the key frames, and we can disable the
effects on this track by clicking on this magic wand over here, so left click on it. If we activate the track, you can see it simply unchecks
this eyeball up here. So check it on.
Everything applies, check it off,
everything turns off. Alright, so let's click
on the clip again. Now we're going to check
on Show Histogram, so we get a visual
representation of the limits in here
or the distribution. Input black level is
pushing this arrow here, so it is pushing the darks
where they could be. We don't want to make
the brights brighter. We want to make them dimmer. So on the white output, we're going to drag it in. It's going to move the
bottom arrow here, which is dimming
down the brights. And we don't want to
go too far either, because we already have some effects that are
going to get applied. So if we apply the effects
now or enable them, let's go back to our clip, see with and without. It's not updating real time. Give it a moment. So
it's a lot brighter. You can see up here
if we enable this, and let's say we move a little
bit. Darker. All right. So this fixes the issue for this clip because it
was the brightest one. And for this one over here, we could say that it is
darker than our other clips. Now, all of this
seems like guesswork. And if you don't want
to do any guesswork, let's go to a
different workspace and let's choose colors. And in here, you have
everything needed to get more precise results
or precise readings. So I recommend you accustom yourself to using these
for your workflow. So I'll go back to
editing, right? And then finally, let's
go back to effects, and we're going to
search for LUT. So LUT, we have
Apply Lut over here. You can download
some custom Luts. Now, the Lut itself, you
could apply to Master, which will apply
to all the tracks. That's if you want to do that. But again, if you have
things like logos and such, you might not want to do it. So you could go online and look for some other custom Lutz. You also have this
little download button here for online resources. You can explore the options. But again, there are luts
available out there for you. So for this clip over here, I'll go ahead and disable
the histogram down there, so I'll click on the clip and
I'll disable the histogram. Alright. Okay, so on the track, again, as I mentioned,
we have the appli ut. You can download custom Luts. You can also apply the ut
before everything else. So it already has a look
before you start working. So here you can see if I use the blue tint ut
before everything, we get this nice blue
look over everything. Okay, so it really helps
to tie things in together. For example, we could
go ahead and apply the ut to this last
track over here. So let's go to the track. Well, let's just grab this one, grab the ut, drag it, drop it on the
track, and we have this little greenish
blue tint over it. All right, so that is
it for this lesson. We've completed or add. All that is left to do
now is to render it out. Alright, and there we
have it render finish. This is a 16 seconds clip. We've rendered it in 26 seconds, and we're all done.
24. Online Resources Pexels - Kdenlive Basics: Hi. In this lesson, I'll be introducing you to
Kdn Live's online resources. To access them, it's quite easy. So on the default layout, if you go over to
the Project panel on the Project Ben tab, go where we import our media, click on the Dropdown. And at the bottom here,
we have online resources. Alternatively, you can
go up to the menu bar, click on View, and then go down to Online Resources
and check it on. Now, it's going to show up somewhere on the
interface for you. In my case, it
shows up inside of the Project panel grouped
with the Project Bin. So once inside the
online resources panel, all the way at the top, we first have to choose a service. So where do you want to get your resources from Freesound, Internet archive
movies, Pixels photos, Pixels videos, or
Pixel Bay photos. So in this case, let's
say we're getting some videos from Pixels. We simply have to
search for a term. So in this case, I'll go for a coffee matches the
theme of our ad. It takes a moment
to download them. You do need access
to the Internet. And then we get the titles of the different clips
that we can download. Over on the right,
we have at the top here created by the
name of the creator. And a link to the asset. Then we have down here created
by as well with a link to the creator of or rather the person who
uploaded the content, the size of the footage, and the duration of it. Okay? We can also preview the
clips that we have selected with the preview button
down here and it will open it over on
our view monitor. It does warn you
that it could take a moment because it does need to download it
from the Internet. So it could preview
different clips. And once we find one that
we'd like to download, all you have to do is
click on Import down here. So with the clip selected,
we click on Import. It gives us the option to choose the resolution that we
want to download it. Or go with something small
just to make it fast. Click on Okay. Next,
we get the option to add some license attribution
to the project notes. This is optional, up to you. You can simply click Add if
you would like to add it. We have do not ask again if
you want this to go away. And finally, we have
continue without, which is what I'll
select since I'll be deleting this shortly after. Next, it will open
the file Explorer. From here, we can simply go to our Assets folder inside of video and maybe drop
this inside of Bro. You could assign a name
to it if you want. So maybe the name over here
rather than these numbers, I'll simply click on Save. And finally, it lets us know that the clip has
been downloaded. Now, of course,
we get the little warning about the profile, so the size of the footage
in the frame rate, we can simply hit Cancel. Now if we go over
to the project bin, I'll take it out of
the sequences folder. We now have our clip downloaded
in our assets folder. So that is it for the
online resources. Remember, you have
different categories, so different services that
you can download from, and you can go to
the website itself. That is it for this lesson.
25. Class Project - Kdenlive Basics: Hello. Okay, so you've made
it to the class project. You can use the assets provided
in this class in order to follow along and create your own ad and give
it your own spin. Or what I recommend is that
you explore a few ideas, see if there's something you would like to get out there or maybe someone else's idea
that you could bring to life. And remember that the project does not start in the program. So find an idea, a message
that you like to convey, feel free to explore videos on pixels and see if
it sparks an idea. And then you can get started
with your own project. And I encourage you to
share it with the class, and don't hesitate to
ask any questions. I'm here to enter them and to clarify any doubts
that you may have.
26. Happy Editing - Kdenlive Basics: So you've reached the
end of the class. I hope you learned something and you had fun in the process. I myself enjoyed preparing
this class for you. Don't hesitate to ask
questions or to leave a review and share the
knowledge with your friends. Again, my name is Jonathan. This was basic editing
with Kaden Live. Now, go out there and
tell your story and happy editing. I'll
see you next time. Hey, before you go,
quick question. Did you notice the color
of my shirt change? Alright, Chow.