Screenshot. This was the beginning of a video editing job I did for a client, before importing all the videos that were sent to me and had started to make the cuts and the edits. I did the job in iMovie where I combined videos, photos and sync music into a cohesive pitch for a product, an advert to be in Kickstarter. If you ever want to get into editing, iMovie is a great app to learn skills in editing, cuts, syncs etc. Will post the video one day break down the scenes and creative approaches to editing. Looking forward to learning Final Cut Pro. Have a great day, everybody!
Thanks for the tip, Rich Terdoslavich. I'll check out iMovie when I start making mood reels for my screenplays. Have a great day too!
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Love this. That blank timeline moment before the edit storm hits is pure potential.
iMovie is a powerful place to sharpen timing, cuts, and music sync. Those fundamentals translate everywhere.
Looking forward to seeing the Kickstarter breakdown!
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I'd recommend DaVinci instead of FCP. Davinci's free version has everything anyone other than a full professional needs, and FCP has been steadily falling out of use and hasn't been updated properly for many years as Apple has moved away from professional editing apps.
Thanks, Shadow Dragu-Mihai.
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Thanks, Mason! Will post the video one day.
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Thank you, Shadow for the info. Have to check it out.
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Thank you, everyone
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You're welcome, Rich Terdoslavich.
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I prefer to work within DaVinci Resolve, as it is the ecosystem I am most familiar with. Ultimately, the choice of software should be based on a creator's personal workflow and comfort, provided the final output meets professional standards.
However, in my opinion, DaVinci Resolve stands out as the superior platform due to its unparalleled precision and the level of fine-tuning it allows during the post-production process.