Make video editing quick and easy

13 min read

Nick Peers reveals how easy it is to take your raw video footage and turn it into a polished movie.

Just how many photos and video clips have you accumulated over the years? Whether you’ve got dedicated equipment or just love snapping and filming on your phone, now is the time to do something creative with it. OpenShot is a brilliant video editing tool that’s relatively simple to learn, yet packed with features that allow you to turn last holiday’s rough video footage into a polished movie you’ll be happy to share with others. In this tutorial we’ll introduce you to all the key elements you need.

The good news is that you can install OpenShot and use it entirely for free, as it’s open source software. Gead to www.openshot.org/download where you’ll find the latest version provided as a 32-bit download. Save this to a suitable folder, like Downloads, for example, then open the folder and double-click the file to launch it. You will be asked if you are ok with intalling it - click yes. At the end of the installation you’ll be prompted to create a desktop shortcut – click Yes and a shortcut will appear on your desktop.

It can take a little while to initialise, so be patient and when the main screen appears, you’re ready to proceed. Run through the quick-start tutorial that will quickly provide an orientation around the application window.

Collect and add your files

Step one is simply to drag and drop your video, picture and audio files to the Project Files pane. OpenShot supports a wide range of formats – if it’s supported by FFmpeg, it’ll work in OpenShot, which covers most bases. After dragging into the pane, use the Video, Audio and Image tabs to filter the view to show only those types of files, or use the Filter box to filter by keyword. Now is the perfect time to save your project for the first time – when you reload it in future, all files you’ve added to the Project Files pane will be restored.

You’re now ready to start putting your movie together. The Timeline pane at the bottom of the screen is where you drag your elements. Five tracks are set up by default, in descending order, with Track 5 at the top, and Track 1 at the bottom. Think of these as layers. Anything placed on Track 1 is your ‘background’, with all other elements appearing on top of it; OpenShot’s support for track transparency means you can overlay all kinds of effects without hiding the original track. More on that later.

For now, we’re going to start with two simple tracks: one video stream containing your video clips (including any sound) and still images, and a separate audio stream for background music. So, let’s clean things up a little: right-click Track 5 and choose Remove, then repeat for Tracks 4 and 3 so only the first two tracks remain. Next, click the V button next to ‘Track 1’ and choose ‘Rename Track’, calling it ‘Video��