Transcription
How to Use Davinci Resolve 17
Hey everyone in today's video. I want to show you how to use DaVinci resolve and how to edit with DaVinci resolve and this is going to be a beginner's tutorial, but I'll walk you. Step-by-step on how to get started with a project all the way to exporting and delivering your project or posting it online.
Now, DaVinci's resolve has been around for many, many years, and it used to be just dedicated to color correction. But in the last several years is become a full-blown editor and he's by far the most advanced free editor that you could get. Now there are two different versions of DaVinci Resolve. There is a free version, which I'm going to show you in this video and there's a paid version. As you can see, I have one of them here and it's called DaVinci resolve studio and I got it because I bought a camera from the same company that makes DaVinci resolve is called black magic. So here's an example of what a black magic camera looks like. This is a 6k camera and in this editing project, as I walk you to resolve, I'm going to show you how to do an unboxing video for this I'll use that example of the footage I captured of this camera and the whole boxing. So you see what a real-life project looks like and I've been editing professionally for 15 years, went to film school before that, and edited almost a thousand YouTube videos just on this channel. So I'm going to walk you through everything I know about editing step-by-step, but I'll make this as short and concise as possible.
I'll put more resources in the description, though. If you want to learn more about dissolve, I'm putting more training together for that and some of the things we're going to talk about. Are going to be in the links below in this video, including a link to downloading the Vinci resolved. So let's go ahead and click that link and get started from there and the Vinci resolve is available for Mac, Windows, and for Linux. So it doesn't matter what system you're on, on your computer, you could download or for any one of them and whatever is the latest version. Go ahead and download it whenever you're watching this. It doesn't change all that much from version to version.
I've used version 14, 15, 16, and they're pretty much similar to 17 and 18 and 19. I'm sure are going to have some minor upgrades. So I'm going to go ahead and download it for Mac I've already installed it. So let me show you the opening window here. And this is what you'll see as your opening window here is the projects panel.
So as you create more and more projects, they'll all appear here. I'm going to press a new project here to create my first project and label it and press create and just like that, it's going to open DaVinci, resolve. So, let me quickly show you the overview of the interface here, and then we'll go through our actual project, which is the unboxing of that black magic camera and I'm going to add music to it. I'm going to show you how to do everything you need to from start to finish of a project. If you look down here, You'll have seven different icons and the great thing about it is if you've never edited before this walks you through exactly how the editing process is going to go.
So let me show you this first, the first panel is called media, which is any video clip, any music, any photos, anything that you want to use, your edit is going to get imported into your project from here. Then you'll get to the cut window. Which you could do minor edits and cutting your footage down. Then you go to the edit window.
Typically, I just jumped over here after importing my footage. Here's where all your editing is going to take place. You could even play with audio here, add music. Everything is going to happen here for your edit. Then if you want, you could go to the fusion panel and the fusion panel has a lot of different options for adding text motion graphics.
There are some 3d options here. A lot of more advanced things here. So we're not going to really dive deep into that and then after that, you get to color and color is by far the most powerful part of the Vinci resolve many, many, many professionals in films and commercials use this part of dementia resolve for color correction.
So I'll show you briefly how to use this, but I'll make more advanced training for that. And then finally you get to fair light. Which is a place to mix your audio. Now, this is again, a more advanced tool. You could actually make sure audio in the editing panel, but you can do more advanced things like adding filters and doing a lot of things in the Fairlight audio mixer here and finally, the deliver panel. Once your project is complete, you could decide where it's going to go. Is it going to go to YouTube? Are you going to export pro progress? If you are going to deliver this for even a commercial, Vimeo, Twitter. All of these options are available up here for you to experiment with, and I'll cover this at the end of the video.
So first things first let's go to the media tab. The very first thing you do with every project after you organize your footage on an external hard drive is you need to import media. Now, how do you do that? Two ways. One, you can right-click here, and then you could go ahead and import media. That's this option.
There's a shortcut for it. I'm not going to cover too many keyboard shortcuts just to make this simple. So if you're on a Mac is control, click. If you're on a PC or Linux is just right-clicked and I've organized my footage here on this external hard drive. So I'm going to bring that in. Now there is on camera footage.
This is just raw on camera footage of me doing the unboxing. And you could see it has no color to it because I'm going to show you some color correction. So I shot this on purpose without any color and then I have what's called B roll. That's just footage of what I'm going to talk about. So you could see some B roll. That's some cinematic shots of the camera that I just recorded yesterday here. So I'm going to add those to the project. I could either grab individual clips. Now, these came from a memory card. You could also have these on a computer. From someone emailing you or really any number of ways to get footage on your computer.
So I'm going to grab this and I could shift, I could hold down shift and select all of them here and it will select all the different clips and I could press open, and next, it's going to say project setting, frame rate, I'm going to press change because I do want my frame res of the project to match what the footage is and it's important that footage for me. The other way to bring foot edges, you could open a window here, or even from your desktop here, you could just go ahead and shrink, dissolve down here and if there's footage on your computer here, you could go ahead and just grab them. So I'm going to just grab them and then drop them over here.
You could see just brought it right in. That's the shot that I just brought in and I could select the rest. I'm going to hold down the shift and I select all of them and bring them in like this. I'm still in the media tab and you could see, I could scrub through just to get a little preview of all the different things I have going on here.
So all my B roll are these shots and all my on-camera things are these shots and you could see how they laid out in the import panel and you could always go ahead and come up here, select one of these and then go ahead and press play and you could see it's playing that shot right here for me. It's just a good way to get a preview of what's going on in your project, but in the edit, we're going to really decide what's good and what we're going to keep with our edit and you may want to bring music here too. We're going to add music later in our projects. So I created a music folder here and I put a music file here. I'll show you where to get copyright free music. So you don't get in trouble. If you're publishing this on YouTube.
In the section where we're going to talk about music, but I'm going to grab and drop this over here too. So it's going to add it over here and you could see my music is now laid out. So everything's been imported all my footage, all my music. If I want to bring photos or graphics, I could also bring those here.
Now let's go to the next panel, which is the cut panel and I usually skip this panel because everything you could do in the cut panel, you could also do in the edit panel. So instead of going through this exact workflow, I go from media to edit. So do the same here. Go to the edit panel and here on the edit panel, you could see all the media we've imported here on the left side of our DaVinci resolve platform here and I'm going to go down because I want to tell my story first, which is me unboxing the camera. So I'm going to add the secondary B roll shots, which are all these different shots after. So the very first step is to cut down your main section and tell your story. So I could go ahead and select one of these.
I could either grab it and just bring it down here and you could see if I just come up to the very beginning and let go. This puts it right here on my timeline. Now this section down here is either called a timeline is basically your entire edited video, which you're going to edit as we go, or it's called a sequence.
You can refer to it both ways. That's probably the way to bring the footage into your sequence and start editing. It is just over here from your media tab, bringing it and dragging and dropping it over here. I can't see my whole clip. You could see right here, here is the times. So it starts at one hour, which is basically your zero marks, and then it goes to 32 seconds. So all I'm really seeing is the first 33 seconds of this huge long clip. So I could grab the slider and just shrink it down so I could see more of it all the way to the end. Which in this case is about seven minutes long and as you could see right here, it says the video. And right here, it says, audio is separated your video and your audio into two different tracks.
They're connected to each other. So if you make any changes and cut is going to do it to your video and audio, which is okay in this case, sometimes I'll show you when it's not okay and you want to treat your video and audio tracks separately. Let's begin our edit the most common way to do an edit is using the blade tool, which is right here and it's a one keyboard shortcut you should really learn. It's just a beef or blade tool. So if I press B, here is selected the blade tool. It turned red. I can bring it down here and I could decide where this is going to start. I could see right here based on what's called an audio waveform. You see all these waves that nothing is happening till about right here.
So I could cut it there. Then this little arrow is a four selection tool. So I'm going to press an on my keyboard is going to select that. Now I could select this piece and then press delete on my keyboard. Now I got rid of that section. That was just a bad section of me not doing anything yet. The video hadn't started, so I need to delete it.
Now I need to fill this gap because if I just press the space bar right here, you could see my videos playing, but it's only showing black. So I need to select the rest of this again, with the selection tool and just drag it to the beginning. Now if I press play is playing my video right now. Let me go ahead and expand this and it looks like I made another mistake. So the video again is going to start a little bit later. It looks like it's going to start right here. So I'm going to go right here. I'm just dragging this time, indicator, this line to where I want to start. I'm going to press beef where the blade tool and then make the cut and I just made the cut right there and I'm going to press a, to delete this. Now another useful option is instead of deleting and then grabbing this and bringing it back, you could hold down shift and press delete and that basically does that step for you. So using the blade tool and then using the arrow tool and then pressing shift delete is the most common way I get rid of areas of my edit.
I don't want to use so for example, again, I'll hold be here. I'll cut here. I'll cut here, then I'll press a, I'll select this and then shift delete right there. It's going to add those together for me. So that's the most basic form of editing here and another way that is going to be very handy is sometimes you need to cut a clip and then let's say, I decided this clip should start before this clip.
So how do I grab this and bring it in between these two clips, like was simply just go ahead and grab this clip and bring it? Up and after this clip, and then I could select both of these and then bring them back. So it's very simple for moving clips around. You can just grab a clip, move it, move things around, just like this.
Now the keyboard shortcuts do make it easier, but. I know when I first started editing, I didn't really worry about learning keyboard shortcuts. I just learned the basics, which is blade tool, selection tool, and the shift delete tool and I'll show you a few more that you'll need to know, but otherwise, you could just go ahead and make cuts here and drag and drop clips in different orders here and then move them around and that's the basics of editing on this panel. Now, obviously, I'm going to spend more time and make sure I get exactly that the video I want out of this seven-minute clip, and let's say I've done that now. I want to add clips on top of it as I talk about this camera. So how do I add that again? I mentioned is called B roll.
When you have footage that doesn't have anyone talking in it, just like this one here. So to add B roll, let me show you a different way to bring it in instead of dragging and dropping, just like you've seen before, I'm going to select some press delete. I'm going to double click it. It's going to put it here in my preview window.
This is my program window. This is what's going to be my finished product here, but this is just for previewing things and here I could just scrub through and see the entire shot. Now, if I like a portion of this, remember this keyboard shortcut, you could use I that we'll put this in point here and then keep going and press ok that will put an outpoint. So now my selection is just here and here. Not this entire clip. If I grabbed it from here, I'm bringing it in here. He brought me the whole clip in this case. I don't want to do that. I just want to bring the endpoint and the outpoint now to add it to my sequence down here, I'll just grab it and bring it down and it's added it's very small. So let me actually zoom into it. There it is. So now it's going to go, let me go a little further back here and press space bar is going to go from me, talking. Into that B roll and then come out now. What if I want to make this a little bit longer here? I could just grab the ends of it and as soon as my mouse turns to this right here, where it says I could extend it to the left, I could click and drag and make this clip a little bit longer. Same thing on this side I could grab and make this clip a little bit longer on that app. So you could do this with any clip too. So when you make your in and out points, you could still extend the length of the clip and you could change the ending of any clip.
You can make a shorter two using the same technique over here. So now it's going to go from video track number one, which is me talking to video track number two, and then back to video track number one. So you can layer your video clips like this on top of each other and I usually dedicate different video tracks to different things.
So video track number one is going to be two, all the footage of me talking video track. Number two is going to be to all the footage of the camera, the B roll and then maybe I could add another video track to put text or whatever else I want on video track number three and to add tracks, all you have to do is right-click over here in this section and say, add track and there it is. Now I have a video track number three. So you could put a ton of different video tracks on top of each other. For more complex projects, but just to keep it simple, we have video track one, which is more often someone talking and then cuts to the video track. Number two. Now the one thing this did that, I want to show you where sometimes this is not what you want.
This video of the camera also has the sound down here. You see how he has a different soundtrack. You put it in an audio track too, but I don't want this track. Because this is not the sound I want with my video. So if I press delete, it's going to delete the whole thing. I don't want that. So I'm going to press command or control Z that undo my last action.
That's also a very useful keyboard shortcut. It's also up here undo and redo is also up here in the edit panel. So remember that too and now if I want to separate the audio and video, so I could just delete the audio, I could right-click on this and I could remove this option link clip on the bottom, and now if I click away and select the audio, I could delete it and the video remains. So that's a very useful option. There are a ton of other options. A lot of them are more advanced here, so we won't cover it right now. But the last one Lincoln, a clip comes in really handy another way. Let me double click and another clip here and let's go ahead and put it in and out points.
Let's go ahead and see where we want to do that. I'll put an endpoint here and let's keep going and I'll put it out point there. So again, I'm using the keyboard shortcut I and O in and out. But now if I come up here, you see there's a video icon and there are all your icons. So I could just grab the video icon and bring it down here next to my other clip and just let us snap to the last clip. Now it's going to go from this shot. To the shot very seamlessly here. And again, I could decide if I want to make this longer. If I want to change the order of them, if I want to grab both of them here, select both and then move them anywhere within my edit. So you really want to take your time and work on this project.
So I usually give a project one pass I go through and make the video track. Number one, to be exactly what I want. On the second pass. I add other clips that I have to video track number two and then once I kind of get an idea of what my project is going to sound like, I may want to come in and add text to my project.
So how do I do that? You could also do this in the edit panel, and you could also do this in the fusion panel, but I usually do this in the edit panel. Let me show you how to do that. Go up here. You see this thing called FX library, click that and it opens up all these different filters over here that you could use.
Now I'll show you a few of them here that are useful. One of them is titles. So if you select titles over here, it's going to show you some basic titles that you could simply put in over your video. Now I'm going to go again to the video track. Number three, remember I just right-click then added the track to get video track number three, so it could be dedicated to text and I could just grab one of these and then drag it over here and this could be my text at the beginning of the video. So let me go ahead and extend that out and there is my text right here, and it's going to show up here as a lower third. Now, how do you edit this text? I just have to double click it.
It's going to open this panel on this site and I could change the name of it over here and it looks like there's a couple of different boxes. So if I want to change this to something else, I could go ahead and do that. So you have sometimes two boxes sometimes when the mix says your actual text goes here.
Then you have a ton of options here, font, font size. You could just grab the slider and change the font size. You'll have a font color here. So I want us to change the font color. I could click this box here and I could go ahead and make it something else. But I want to make sure it's easy to read. Specially.
If I don't have a background on it, I'll press okay. Let's keep going down and see what else we have. We have a drop shadow. We have a stroke. We could even add a background here so I could add a background and I could change the height here of the background with the background and just make it a little bit easier to read.
So tons of different options you could play around with to make sure this is exactly what you want and let's say this is going to be the section right here on my lower third. So that's how you add text and titles. The next thing I'll show you here is sometimes you want to add, add a transition. So for example, let's say I didn't want this shot right here.
I'll just click over here and come right before the shot. I don't want me talking and then going straight into the shot. Maybe I want to put a transition to make that a little bit more seamless or smooth, not just a straight cut that you saw. You also have video transitions on the effects library. So same place I am. I compress video transitions and you have a ton of different transitions to choose from. Now. I recommend not using more than two or three different transitions per project and keeping it to the basics. You can really ruin a project by just using some of these really cheesy transitions, like across Iris here, but you could get a little preview as you go through each one to see what it's going to look like.
So one of my favorites is just a cross dissolve. This is just when it dissolves from one clip to another. So I'll grab it. I'll put it right at the beginning of this clip, you see right there, it's letting me do it. I'll drop it. Now let's go back here and press the space bar here and I have myself on mute.
That's why you can't hear me and that's just a simple cross-dissolve from one clip to another. The other one is sometimes in between two clips, you want to dip to a color. So this one is called dip to color. I could drag this one, put it between the two clips you see now is between this clip and this clip I'll press the spacebar to play it. That was just a simple dip to black, between two clips, which is also very useful, especially when there's music, any one of these, you could also have complete control, so I could select one of them, double click it. And he opens the section for me, where you could change the duration.
You could change the type of transition. And all the different options always show up over here. Very, very useful, and easy to add DaVinci, resolve transitions just by grabbing it and dragging and dropping it where you want them. While we were still on the panel for editing, let's go ahead and add music.
You could actually do that over here. So if you didn't add music in the media tab, just go ahead and right-click here in this section and import media and you could add your music here. So this panel, the editing panel, where we're on is by far the most powerful because you could do just about everything for your project here.
Except for delivering the project, which will happen at the end to add music to your project. Make sure it's important here and here's my music track again. I could grab this and bring it down here to another track, not the track where I'm talking. That's track one. I just dragged it and dropped it to audio channel two here. Go ahead and make this a little bit smaller so we could see, and there is our music track. Now, as far as where I get my music from, there are a ton of websites where you could purchase music, royalty, free music. That just means you won't get in trouble for using the music on a commercial or on YouTube, or really any public place.
If this is an internal or a home movie, it's okay. But for anything that other people are going to see, you need royalty-free music. YouTube actually gives you a strike or a copyright strike. If you use music, you don't have permission to use it. So I recommend this place called in vital. I have an affiliate link in the description below.
To this platform and the main reason why I like it, not because they have thousands, tens of thousands of different, really good quality songs you could choose from. But because the pricing is based on monthly unlimited pricing, some of the other platforms, every time you download a song, you have to pay for that song.
This basically lets you download as many as you want for a flat monthly fee and you also have access to all these different things like stock video. Let's you download and use all these different clips in your videos, all part of the same monthly pricing. So it makes it really, really awesome to get everything you want from graphics to photos, to fonts, to sound effects and music, and even video templates here to do some really fancy things with editing all in one platform for one price.
So if you want to check this out and get your music from here. This is typically where I get my music. Now sometimes you'll have to add more music tracks here to fill your whole audio track. So it doesn't end before your video's done. So you could go ahead and do that way and if you have people talking and the music underneath the music is going to overwhelm the person talking and you can't hear them.
So you have to change the level of the music track. One of the simpler ways to do this is you could just come over here and when your mouse turns to these double arrows, you could grab it and drag this down. Typically music tracks fall somewhere between 26 and 30 DB. That makes it pretty good for the audio to be heard pretty clearly and makes the music, the background music.
So that's how you change it. You could do this to multiple different clips. Another way you could do this is there's this option right here. It says mixer, select this. And it shows you this nice mixer over here where you have your different audio tracks. So I have an audio track one. That's me talking audio track two is the music and bus one, that's just the overall mix of my whole video. So I could just grab audio, track number two, and bring it down to about 30 here. And it's going to change the audio for my music. Now, again, I have this on mute so I could talk through it, but if I press play now, you could see, as I talk, I don't want that to go very high.
I don't really want it to go anywhere over negative five. I could raise it a little bit if I want to here and I want my music to be way down here and then my overall mix again, I don't want it to really hit red. So if I boost something too high and he starts hitting red. That's going to clip and distort my audio.
I definitely don't want that. So pay attention to this. You can also use your ear here to see how the mix between the music and the vocal sound. If you have that, if you don't have anyone talking, you want your music to be just at about the same level. So if no one was talking here, you do want your music to be somewhere.
Over this range of just barely hitting that red area here. So just under negative five, negative 60 B is fine. So this is a very useful mixer just to make sure audio very, very easily. And I'll close the mixer here and the last thing I'll show you is sometimes you want to fade out your video or your audio.
All you have to do comes to the end of it right here. Let me choose music here. You see this, the little dot that shows up these double arrows, click it and drag it back and this is fading out your music. Now it also shows you how long the fade-out is. So four seconds, five, six, seven, depending on what you want to do, you could fade out the music easily.
This way. You could do the same thing with the video even. So if I go over here and press play, This is going to actually fake to black because I just drag this down. You could see slowly fading to black. Now, typically with video, you don't want the fate to be that long and you don't want it to interfere with someone talking, but you get the idea here.
You could fade just about anything here just by grabbing it. On these corners and bring it in and out. Let's say we're done with our edit on this section. The next page is fusion and under fusion. As I mentioned, you could add multiple different things here, like texts, and you can paint things. You could do a lot of different things, but this is much more advanced than what we were going to cover in this video.
But I just want to show you that there are some possibilities here and it gives you a lot more options, much more advanced options that we won't cover here. Let's go to this panel color. Now color is probably the most useful part of the Vinci for professionals for new editors, you usually shoot videos or deal with videos that already have the color that you want and you might want to do some minor changes, but I purposefully let me double-click this year and bring it over here. You could see that I shot this with basically no color, just so I could show you some very basic color correction. I'm not going to go too deep. Again, this is very, very professional.
There are entire courses dedicated to DaVinci to resolve color correction and if you look over here, you basically laid out the different types of shots I have. So I have this shot, this shot, and this shot, those could be color corrected, and then I could copy whatever I did to those shots, to other clips.
In my timeline, it makes it really simple. So you don't have to color correct. Every single clip that shows up over here and probably the easiest panel to use over here is this one right here. These are called color wheels. It's really easy to use here. Let's go ahead and play with these sliders over here.
So typically I'll play around with my shadows. So I want more shadows in this footage. So I'll make it a little bit darker here and highlights it. I'll bring the highlights up a little bit and this saturation has no color. So I need to add a lot more saturation to it. So I'll bring the saturation up here.
I'm just grabbing this and. You could also type in a number here and bring in some saturation all the way to a hundred. I don't usually touch you here. So I'll leave that be and then up here, you'll have some options. You have a temperature. This is going to make it warmer or cooler, depending on which way you go.
So I'll just leave this one. I don't need to do much with temperature. Tint. I also don't do much with it, but you could change the color of your overall shot with tint and the contrast is probably very useful cause this needs a lot of contrast. So I'm going to boost that up. Oh, I went too far. Let me bring it back and somewhere over here is where I want my contrast to be and it's starting to look good. Just playing with those few different sliders here. And you could also play with these color wheel here, just grab this dot and move it around to see what effects you get. You also have this drop-down that lets you wipe balance. So if you select this and select something white on your image, it fixes a lot of the issues for you.
So also like the white area of this box and it fixed some of the colors for me just by white balancing. Now I'll show you a before and after I'm going to right-click on this section and reset this, you see how it was before and I'll press command Z to bring it back. So that's mine after. So I just did this very quickly.
I usually spend a lot more time on this panel and really dive into much deeper things like curves and really tweak. All kinds of things into my shot, but just for the basic overview, just play around with it the color wheel, and you should get what you're looking for for a basic overview of dementia, resolve color correction, and if you decide that you like what this looks like, and you want to apply it to the other clips in your video. So this is the before this is the after I could just simply select this node right here and press control or command C. That copies all my effects here. And then I could come to this clip and press command or control V and that pastes the color correction that I did to my other clip.
It's a very, very simple way to apply effects from one clip to another clip. Okay. Let's say we're done here with our color correction. Let me just go ahead and add it to this clip and to this clip and let's go to the next section, which is fair, light. In fair light, you get some advanced mixing and even the DaVinci resolve studio, the paid version of dementia shows you give you a lot of different effects and filters here that you won't have in the free one.
But the free one is a very, very powerful tool, but this is again for more advanced audio mixing. So we're not going to cover it in this video, but I want to show you that it's available here. So you want to learn more about it. In this panel, just go ahead and look up some of the training that is available for them.
Let's go to the deliver tab and get this project out of the Vinci so we could post it online or send it to whoever we need to in this panel. Everything is pretty straight forward. It just lays it out over here on the left side. Where do you want this video to go? The most common way is you could go to YouTube.
That's this option over here. You could export as pro-Rez. This makes a massive file. The file size is going to be really big, but typically when I'm making commercials for different brands, I usually do the pro-Rez export. You have some other options, like is a very common way to get this out on the web and probably going to H two 65, right now, this is more supported online as I'm recording this.
So this is what I would choose. So it really between this and pro-Rez is your export options unless you know exactly where you're going. So if you're going into YouTube, which this video is exactly going to YouTube for this unboxing, I'm going to select that now resolution, this is 1080 P or HD. I could change it to 4k because my project was shot in 4k.
So if you have that option, you could choose that. The frame rate was set at the very beginning of the project. So I'm going to leave it as is. That's why I just let it change automatically and didn't go to the frame rate settings, at the beginning, quick time, or MP4. I could choose that. I usually choose MP4 and then the H two, six, four is the Kodak for YouTube too. So the same one is for YouTube as well. That's all your export settings. Again, the only thing that may change. Is if you want to do HD or 4k or even smaller here, like seven 20 P you could choose that. Or if they have other exports settings, by the time you see this thing, you could export six K, go ahead and choose that.
Then you label this, whatever you want, and choose a location. Just press browse. Choose a destination. The movie folder is fine here. I'll press save and I'm all set. I could just go down here and press adds to render queue. There's an option to upload directly to YouTube. I never use this because of my full control over posting on YouTube, I have different videos on how to properly post on YouTube as well.
You can watch those to get a good idea of how to do that. I'll press add to render and you could see over here, it's the render queue. This is the job, and you could add multiple projects here to the render queue, and then press render all and it's going to go through my whole video here and start exporting it and it will show up in my movies folder and then I could go ahead and send it to anybody, put it on Dropbox or Google drive to share it that way, posted on YouTube, Twitter, Vimeo, whatever I want to do, I could do after this is done and here's an external hard drive. I recommend everybody that who's editing more than a hobby buys these because you'll never lose footage this way.
I buy two of these identical ones. I put my footage. To both of them. So if one fails is still on the other one and I edit right off the drive and he saves my computer from filling up with space because video files are huge. That's why I recommend buying. These are put a couple of them that I like into the screen shouldn't be though. I hope you found this video useful. Please give it a thumbs up, check out all the resources we talk about. What about in the description below? I'll see you in the next video.