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Basic video editing, color correction after capture?
I have converted my 8mm analogue home movies to digital files by year and separated them under 2 topics like "family" and "annual golf with friends"
I'm thinking my next step is to try and enhance bad lighting/adjust color cut out unnecessary frames. Am I correct that this is such basic editing? I should seek the "most friendly"/ possibly free software. Do you have a recommendation for easiest to use? DaVinci tutorials are intimidating on first viewing. I'm assuming, just like any document, any of my new files I edit, get saved as a post edit/new name and nothing happens to the original, yes? -- merged -- What I could have included was my problem of the most basic step of getting 2 related clips into the editing window prior to editing. It seems having a better filing system so I can drag and drop clips from just one file, I can then combine them to edit. Is there an "editing" term for this simple act of copy pasting before editing actually begins? "Opening 2 or more clips"? |
Adjusting color seems simple, but it's really not. It's both science and art.
There's several great options, such as: - basic VirtualDub (with Colormill plugin) - somewhat complex Avisynth scripting - the DaVinci pseudo-NLE - and quite a few others, both suggested software, and lousy software -- so be careful! All of them require a learning curve, but can do what you want. For color correction, I really don't think any of them is easier than the others. Most video/NLE software requires an export to get a new clip. Merely "saving" the project saves the timeline information, not a new video. I'm not sure if that's what you're asking here? As far as the "getting 2 clips" issue, it sounds like you want something with a timeline, to add multiple clips, and adjust each independently? |
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