After you import your media files (videos, images, etc.) to Filmora9 (latest Filmora version 9), it’s time to start the editing. This tutorial will show you how to arrange the clips in your timeline, clean up your footage, edit out unwanted parts, and more.
1. To select a single media file: click on its thumbnail.
2. To select multiple media files: press and hold [Ctrl], and then click the thumbnails of the media you want to select.
3. To select a sequence of media files: click the first thumbnail in the sequence, press and hold [Shift], and then click the last thumbnail in the sequence.
Note: You can find a specific media file using the Search bar.
In the Media Library, right click on the clip you want to remove and select DELETE.
Note: When you delete a video clip or other piece of media from the Media Library , you are only removing it from Filmora9 and it won't delete it from your computer or storage device.
Here are two ways to add media to the timeline:
Method 1: Find the video clip you want in the Media Library. Then, drag and drop it into your timeline.
Method 2: Right click the video clip in the Media Library, and you will get:
Insert: add your media to the selected track at the playhead. Any media that is already in the track on the right side of the inserted media will move to the right by the length of the inserted clip.
Overwrite: add your media to the selected track at the playhead, and replace any media already occupying the space your added media takes up.
Append (add to the end): add your media as the last piece of media in the selected track.
Add to new track: add your media to a newly created track which has no other media.
Note: You cannot add media to tracks with Track Lock enabled.
Filmora9 includes several sample colors (still images of color) and countdown intro videos. To access these resources, click Media and choose Sample Colors or Sample Video.
To delete a single video clip or other piece of media from your timeline, right click on the media in your timeline and select Delete, select the clip and hit the Delete icon in the toolbar, or select the clip and press the Delete key on your keyboard.
To remove multiple video clips or other pieces of media, press and hold CTRL, then select the target files. When you are done selecting, let go of CTRL and delete the items using the delete icon, the delete key on your keyboard, or by right-clicking and selecting delete.
Sometimes removing or deleting the video clips using the methods above will leave a big gap in the timeline. To avoid the gap, you can use the Ripple Delete feature.
Right click on the clip you need to remove (or hold down CTRL and select multiple pieces of media, then right click) and then select Ripple Delete to remove that clip and have the remaining media in the track move over to fill the empty space.
If you need to trim from the beginning or end of a video clip (or other piece of media), hover your mouse over the left or right edge of the clip in your timeline until the trim tool shows. Then, click and drag the edge of your clip forwards or backwards to trim off the unwanted portion.
If you need to cut out a section in the middle of a video clip, drag the playhead to the start point of the unwanted section and press the scissors icon to split the clip, then drag the playhead to the end of the unwanted section and press the scissors again. Now that the unwanted section is on its own you can select it and press the delete icon to remove it.
Filmora9 also has an option for you to ‘quick trim’ from the start or end of a clip. In the timeline, place the playhead on the frame you want to trim to, right click on the clip, and select Trim Start to Playhead or Trim End to Playhead depending on whether you want to delete what’s behind the playhead or in front of it.
There are several ways to split clips in Filmora9:
Split a clip manually on the timeline
1. Drag the playhead to the position where you want to split one or more clips and click the Split icon on the playhead to create the split.
Note: If you don’t select a specific track in your timeline, you will split all of the clips under your playhead. To split media in a single track, you need to select the track first and then click the Split icon.
2. Place the playhead at the position where you want to split the clip, right-click, and choose Split.
3. Move the Playhead to the target position and click the scissors icon in the toolbar to split the clip.
To split a clip using the Scene Detection feature:
Right click on the clip in the Media Library panel and select the Scene Detection option. In the popup window, click the DETECT button. Scene detection may take a few moments. After the detection process is finished, select the unwanted scene and press delete to remove it.
To rotate or flip a clip:
1) Double click the clip in the Timeline.
2) In the popup Video panel, choose the Transform.
3) To rotate the clip, drag the rotate slider to the right or enter a numerical value in the rotate section to rotate the video as you want.
4) In the Flip section, click the Flip Horizontal icon to reverse the clip from left to right, or click the Flip Vertical icon to turn the clip upside down.
Click Reset to undo your changes orOK to apply the effect to your video. You can also right click on the clip in the timeline and select Rotate 90 CW or Rotate 90 CCW directly.
Follow the steps below to crop out and zoom into parts of your video clips:
1) Right click on the clip in the timeline
2) Select the Crop and Zoom option from the menu or click the Crop icon to open the Crop and Zoon panel.
3) In the popup window, move and adjust the rectangle to surround the area you want to crop. You can also choose the preset from the following preset dimensions: 16:9, 4:3, 1:1 or 9:16. Or you can select Custom to crop the video with your own ratio.
You can use the Join feature when you have several video clips in a sequence and want to combine them into one clip. To join videos clips, place them to the Timeline in the sequentialorder you want. They will be joined or combined as one video after export.
When you copy and paste clips in Filmora’s timeline, the spacing of the clips is kept. You can paste copies of clip at the end of your video or insert them at the location of the playhead.
Step 1: Select one or more clips in the sequence, right-click, and choose Copy.
Step 2: In the timeline, position the playhead at the point where you want to paste a copy of the clips.
Step 3: Right click and choose ‘paste’.
Note: If there are clips in the track before you paste, they might be overwritten by the pasted clips.
Enhance your video clips by adjusting the white balance, tone, color, light, and HSL and by adding vignettes.
Double click the target clip in the timeline to enter the Edit panel, and select Color menu, the window will show as below:
Drag the sliders respectively to adjust your color temperature, tint, contrast, saturation and brightness. You can also enter a numerical value if you know the exact adjustment you want to make. There are also 3D LUT effects available if you want to change the entire look of your video at once. Watch the Preview Window to see how the new settings affect the look of your video.
Click Advanced to enter the Advance Color Tuning panel where you’ll find presets as well as options to customize your colors, lighting, hues, saturation, luminance, vignettes, etc.
You can also enter the Advanced Color Tuning window by right clicking a clip and then selecting Color Correction or clicking on the Color icon in the toolbar.
Right click on your clip in the timeline and select Speed and Duration to open the Custom Speed window. Drag the speed slider to adjust the speed of the video clip. You can also enter the precise speed you want in the speed field, or change your speed by changing the video duration. You can make your video up to 100x faster or 0.01x slower.
In the custom speed panel, you can tick the Play video clip in reverse option to play your clip backwards.
You can also click the Speed icon in the toolbar to see options for adjusting your video’s speed.
Filmora9 offers speed control presets so you can quickly slow your clip to 0.5x, 0.25x, 0.1x, 0.05x or 0.01x the speed or make it up to4x, 8x, 20x, 50x or 100x faster.
Want to learn how to change the playback duration of an image? Learn here>>
A freeze frame is a still image representing a single frame of your video clip. Usually, freeze frames are used to make it seem like time has stopped at a specific moment in your video. Here’s how to create a freeze frame in Filmora9 (Latest Filmora version 9):
To zoom in or out and see more or less (in more detail) of your timeline, use one of these methods:
If you need to resize a video clip, drag and drop it into the timeline to cut out part of the video. Or, you can change the resolution, frame rate, and bit rate in the export window to lower the file size. If you need to change the display size of a video, use the Scale slider.
To access the Scale slider, right click on the video clip you need to resize in the timeline choose Show Properties (Edit), and click into the Video tab in the popup window. Go to Transform and drag the Scale slider to the right or the left to resize the video clip. You can also enter an exact value if you know the exact percentage you want to scale to.
Click to check the details of how to resize video files. .
If you want to add a watermark/logo image to your video in the timeline, drag and drop the watermark/log to the video track (i.e Track 2) above the track (i.e Track 1) that places your video.
You can resize the watermark/logo image in the Preview Window by adjusting the small circles and squares at its edges, and move it to where you want in the Preview Window.
To adjust the opacity or blending mode of your watermark or logo (i.e. make it transparent), double click the logo image in the timeline to open the Image panel and go to Composition. From there you can choose a composition mode (i.e. darken) and use the Opacity slider to adjust your transparency.
You can adjust the playback quality of the Preview window for a smoother editing experience. For example, you can improve the performance of your preview by playing your video at a lower resolution than you want for your finished project or by creating proxy media files to edit with.
Proxy files are more manageable versions of your clips that are easier to edit with because they are smaller in terms of data (i.e. they are at a lower resolution). You can edit with a proxy file in Filmora9, then export with your full-sized original clip.
Setting Playback Quality
Reducing your playback quality can eliminate lags and save you time. Click the Display icon in the lower-right corner of the preview window, then click Playback Quality and choose from these options:
Full: preview your video without changing the original resolution
1/2: preview your video at 1/2 the original resolution
1/4: preview your video at 1/4 the original resolution
1/8: preview your video at 1/8 the original resolution
1/16: preview your video at 1/16 the original resolution
Note: the reduced playback resolution only applies to the video preview and will not affect the export settings.
Preview rendering reduces the preview lag which can occur when editing complex or high resolution projects. This results in smoother playback. Filmora9 offers 2 ways to render your timeline preview:
Manual Render (The Render Button)
Click the Render Button to begin rendering your timeline whenever this red line appears (as when you add media or make other changes to your timeline).
The render preview window will pop up, showing the render progress and the estimated remaining time.
Once the rendering is complete, the red line will turn green.
Note: you will need to wait until the rendering process is finished to continue editing.
Auto-Render
Besides manually clicking the Render Button, you can also use a feature called Background Render. If you enable it, your videos will be rendered automatically when you add your videos to the timeline for editing. You can go to File-Preferences-Performance, set a starting time and enable it. By default, the render process will be performed after 5 seconds of inactivity on the timeline.
Click OK to save your settings.
Note: The rendered parts of your timeline will be indicated by a green line. The line will be red for the un-rendered parts. Once you change, modify, or add effects to the rendered section you’ll notice the line turning red to indicate you need to render again.
Click the Auto Ripple button to turn on ripple editing. This will allow you to trim, add, and delete clips without leaving a gap in your timeline. If you add new media in the middle of your timeline all of your clips and effects will be shifted to the right to accommodate the new addition.
When auto-ripple is on you can automatically delete all of the effects applied to a clip when you delete the clip itself. Turn on auto ripple, select the video clip, right click, and choose Delete.
Filmora9 allows you to link clips together as a group so you can move them without changing the positions relative to each clip within the group.
How to group clips
To combine multiple clips into a group, hold the Ctrl key on your keyboard and click the clips that you want to group in the timeline. Then, right-click the clip and select Group from the context menu.
Ungrouping Clips
To unlink your grouped clips, right-click one of the grouped clips in the timeline and select Ungroup.