Getting Started with Blender for Video Editing

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hello everyone and welcome to another video today we're kicking off another series of tutorials that focus on how to use blender as a video editor you may have heard of blender in the context of generating computer graphics for our animated films or 3d modeling but surprisingly the software is incredibly versatile and can do a lot more in a lot of different areas one of these lesser-known domains is actually the realm of video editing we're gonna see that blender is a very powerful and more importantly very free piece of software you don't need to pay a ton of money for something like Adobe Premiere DaVinci Resolve when you can just use blender in terms of an agenda for the discussion today here's what we're gonna cover we're gonna start by talking about very quickly how to download and install blender 2.80 just so you know at the time of publishing this video blender 2.80 is actually a fairly recent new release so you may see a lot of existing documentation on the web or elsewhere that covers blender 2.79 surprisingly there's a fair bit of changes between the two so hopefully this will be useful for anyone who is on the newer system after we've got blender 2.80 installed we'll take a look at setting up the video editing environment we'll do things like figuring out how to set the dimension slash resolution of the footage how to pick the output format and the directory as well as selecting an audio codec after we've got the video editing environment set up we'll take a look at some very basic video editing operations namely how would you go about adding video clips how can you build video proxies and how can you cut and splice video and/or audio clips and then finally once we've got our clip all edited we'll take a look at rendering the final edited video so just to note this tutorial today is designed to be a very simple getting started discussion to get you comfortable navigating the environment future videos will cover more advanced topics like adding picture and picture transitions Gaussian blurs and more so if this sounds like more fun than a roomful of puppies let's get started by getting blender installed alright so the first thing we're gonna want to do is just go to Google and then type in blender and no we're not actually looking for Vitamix Azure things to make smoothies so instead we're gonna come here to blender org and this is the website so we'll just come up here to downloads and we'll grab the windows 64-bit installer so I'll just go ahead and click on download and it should start downloading it in a second and there it goes I'll give it a couple of minutes to continue and finish downloading and we'll be back in a second alright and we're back and it looks like it finished I'll just click on the MSI to start the Installer and drag it over here to this screen I'll go ahead and click Next and agree to this licensing agreement and click Next then next and then install and we'll give the Installer a couple minutes to finish I always wonder what you're doing when you click on those licensing agreements and just blindly agree to them maybe you're giving them your dog in your house but oh well oh here and it looks like we're done so I'll just go ahead and click on finish and now if we go ahead and look on the desktop we have our nice icon to launch blenders so let's go ahead and double click on the shortcut and that just start blender up in the other screen I think it's gonna pull up on so I'm gonna have to drag blender over and here you are we're here at Blender v 2.80 and we'll go ahead and get started alright so as we talked about earlier blender is a very popular animation and 3d modeling system and we're gonna need to set up the environment to handle video editing luckily it's really as simple as coming up here to the file menu clicking on new and going to video editing and this will now set up the environment and the layout to be conducive to video editing now rather than exhaustively walking through what all of these different panels and panes are let's just start using it to splice a couple of clips together and hopefully in this process will see the necessary operations that are needed to do something very simple from a video editing for perspective so the first thing I want to do is let's make a folder on our computer's hard drive which will hold the clips and eventually the blender file and all the edits that were making so I've already done that here so let me pull up my C Drive and I've got this folder here just on my C Drive called blender example and in here you're gonna see I already have three files that I want to work with so the first one is an mp4 clip it's just a video clip of me doing some stuff on the whiteboard the second one is an MOV file which is a if you'll notice here it's actually a vertical it was taken an iPhone and it's in the vertical orientation and it's just on my dog playing in the snow and then lastly I've got an mp3 file which we're gonna want to use to kind of add a soundtrack to our video so now that I've got this folder here where I want to contain all of my content and materials I find that it's easiest to try to save my blender file in this same location so coming back to blender all we want to do here is let's do that very first before we make any other changes so I'm just gonna come over here to file and save and now you're gonna get this navigation pane and it's a little bit hard to see but all we need to do is basically navigate to the location of where you want to save this so in on my case I want to go here on my C Drive so I kept clicking on the up arrow to get up to my C Drive come here to blender example this is where I want to save the file so here I don't want to call it untitled maybe let's just call this how about simple editing demo dot blend is the file extension so if I go ahead and save this now click on save blender file and I come back to my folder you'll see that we've got this blender file this simple editing demo dot blend this is basically where it's gonna save all of the the transitions or the cuts or all the information that's needed so really you really need just this file and I guess obviously the source files that we're gonna include in our project in just a second but really this is the one of the main files that blender is going to utilize during the workflow okay so let's go ahead and continue setting up the environment so what I like to do next is I like to come over here to this far a kind of upper-right panel or pane where it says dimensions now what you're gonna want to do here is first let's set the resolution of what we want the final rendered video to look like so in this case it looks like 1920 by 1080 pixels and I have this at a hundred percent make sure that this is this is at the resolution you want and furthermore that this is at a hundred percent in older versions of blender namely blender 2.79 this was I think by default at 50 percent and every single time you had to make sure you you bumped up to 100% otherwise you would get basically a movie that was half the resolution you would expect but anyway this is an easy place where you can make these changes so let's just from top to bottom so the resolution yeah that seems to be the right resolution and pixels for an HD video so I can leave all the rest of these as defaults right here frames start and frame end this is basically how many frames do you want to render that's gonna make a little bit more sense later so why don't we leave this as as one and 250 and we'll come back to this in a second once we import some videos so just keep this in mind okay all right so scrolling down we don't actually need to deal too much with the frame rate we're gonna see that that is also gonna automatically be updated when we import a movie so let's ignore this for now now coming down here to output though this is something that we are gonna want to change so when you render your final movie it's gonna kick out a output file and right now it's going to some weird random temporary directory again I like to make sure everything is in the same location so I'm gonna click on this browse button here and I'm going to browse to that same location namely my blender example folder that we had just made now again you can go ahead and navigate to it through here using the UP button or you can in the recent pane it's gonna start remembering some of the things that you've been doing so for example right here it remembers that we you were just in this blender example folder so if I click here you'll see these are the files that we were dealing with earlier so what you can stew here is you can name the output of the the project so what I'm gonna do call this is let's how about call this final up so final rendered video okay and then I'll go ahead and hit accept now what that is gonna do is it's now when we're done at the end of this process and we want to save the video it's gonna stick it in see blender example it's gonna make a file called final rendered video with whatever the appropriate file extension is so great all right let's keep scrolling down so I'm just gonna scroll down with my middle mouse button just kind of scroll this pane down a little bit now next thing we're gonna want to do is what are we gonna output now by default this is set to PNG and what that means it's gonna try to render a whole boatload of PNG pictures which is not what we want for our video editing project so I'm gonna click on this drop-down and let's instead change this to how about a ffmpeg video which seems a little bit more reasonable okay so when you change that you a couple more options obviously I think I would like a color not a black and white video let's click now on this encoding drop-down okay so I'm going to click on this and then you're gonna have a couple of other options so in here container I'm gonna make this an mp4 video cuz that's what I like to work with so I'm gonna click on mp4 great and I can change some other things like the output quality so for example instead of just medium quality if I want it to be like how about like perceptually lossless so it really doesn't lose too much I'll click on that okay that seems pretty good the encoding speed I'll leave as default the last thing you're gonna need to do here is if your video has audio like a soundtrack or smoke and voice or anything like that you want that included in your video you're gonna have to choose an audio codec to do that so I'm gonna click on audio codec and I'm gonna pick a AC which is what I typically use okay so again I'll leave the those options also standard so at this point I think we've set up everything to be ready for video editing so I'm gonna come here and save again and notice you'll see that there's this star up here in the upper left so with the star that tells you that basically you have unsaved changes so if I click on save we'll see the star go away there it goes it went away alright so now that we've got everything set up we want to actually import some of those video clips so we can start working with them so the easiest way to do that is we'll come down here in this kind of bottom pane and you'll see there's a thing that says add so I'll click on this add and then what I want to add is I want to add a movie so I'll click on that and it should take us to our folder where we were working on again we have these two clips let's start with clip 1 mp4 so I'll just click on this and then I'll say add movie strip and here it goes it drops it in and you'll see there's two of these tracks here one on channel 1 one on channel 2 so basically these are the video and the or excuse me this one is the video and the way you can tell is when I click on this top kind of purplish one you come up here and you see this icon and that's clearly a video and if I click on the bottom one you'll see a music kind of note so this is the audio component so these two make up the color this particular clip one now you're going to see that if you drag up here this is sort of the scrubbing tool you can kind of see what the point the the video clip looks like okay and you can see that it's quite large and it goes off the screen so I could come down here and drag this little bottom slider to move it around but I really kind of want to just zoom out that might be helpful so the way to zoom out is just put your mouse somewhere here in the video sequencer and I'm just gonna scroll down on with my middle mouse wheel so I'll just keep scrolling down scrolling down scrolling down scrolling up there you go okay so now I can see the entire video and here's where a couple of things that we might want to bring your attention so notice that portions of this are that they kind of are a different shading than these other regions over here what the portions that are sort of in shading are indicating they're indicating which areas of the video are which sections of the video are you actually going to render and are you actually working with so that goes back to again remember we said that this was gonna matter up here the frames start in the frame end so what we see is right now we're only rendering the first 250 frames of animation which apparently only looks like it goes about a third through the video so if I want to be dealing with the entire video I'm gonna have to increase this number so let's increase this number - I don't know how about how about 700 so I'll get 7 and hit enter you notice that that shading gets a lot bigger and now we and cover encompass the entire video so that's pretty helpful ah let's do it another couple things that will help us maybe with visibility and understanding what the what the clips look like um let's clip click on the audio clip right we said that this this kind of teal ish color down here was the audio clip and you saw that with these music notes here the other way that might be helpful to visualize what that that waveform looks like is if you go ahead and come down here make sure you've selected the strip tab you can click on this draw waveform button and then it will draw the waveform so you can kind of see where you're talking and where you're not and things like that maybe what we might want to do at this point is we might want to just play the video just to get an idea of what it looks like so if you want to play this again we know that borrow up here's a scrubber you can just click you know left click and drag and I'll scrub through the other way you can do this is if you just come down here to this play button it will just play the video so let's go ahead and try that now possibility we have to deal with both of these issues here if we're trying to actually implement them right great and you can see that that's working but if you noticed up here in the preview pane it was very jerky right it was not very smooth and furthermore if you kind of look up here you'll see the frames per second normally that should be at 30 in fact if we come back to our scene over here remember earlier this framerate said 24 frames per second but when we as soon as we imported that video this changed now to be the frame rate of the video so it should be playing at 29.97 frames per second if I play this this preview here let's hit it again right well lqr is going to give us a technique to directly address this so what it's not playing it anywhere near the real time rate so the problem is the clip that we loaded in it was a high definition video clip if we come over here to this original clip and look at the properties you know it's a 1920 by 1080 so let's say it's a HD video clip so what we want blender to do is instead when we're just working with with simple we're doing the video editing I don't want to work with the high resolution video I want to build what's called a proxy of that video or basically a lower resolution of version of that video that blender will use to display and I can work with and then when I want to render the final video I'll then use the blender wheel natively and naturally use the high definition video but when I'm just doing making simple edits I don't need that fidelity so to do that what we can do is let's click on the video strip right here right it was this kind of purply blue channel on channel 2 okay so the way we're gonna make a proxy in blender 2.80 is again you click on this you come over here to the lower right section and you're gonna want to come down here to this this tab here which says proxy and cache if you click on that you'll see that you've got a couple of other options what we're gunning for down here is this one down here which says strip proxy and time codes so I'm gonna click on this radio checkbox or sorry the checkbox soon as you click on that checkbox you get a couple of other options the one we care about is this twenty five percent so what this is basically saying is I want to make a 1/4 resolution video you could do a 50% or 75% but you know in the in the interest of making this as smooth and as fast as possible I'm gonna pick the smallest size for my proxy so I'm gonna click on 25% and what I want to do is let me move blender kind of off to one side and I'll try to here let's see if we can do put both them on on one on either side there we go okay so here's the our output folder and here is blender on the left so notice what we're gonna do is when you click on this rebuild proxy and time code indices with all these settings what blender is gonna do is it's gonna start scanning through this video and building one of these proxies okay so pay attention when I click on this notice down here in the blender icon in the taskbar you see this green filling up this is basically how far along you are in the process and notice it also created this folder called BL proxy now I don't know why we have to stare here at this green bar filling up and I can just see it just finished right in the older versions of blender there was a progress bar within the native blender which showed you how far along this rebuild process you were as you can probably imagine if you have a large file and it's an HD file it might take a long time to build this proxy but for whatever reason that progress bar is missing in version two point eight zero so you're kind of forced to resort and watch the icon in the windows taskbar to see when that green bar fills up so it is kind of a progress bar it's just not in the progress bar in the section you would expect so that being said let's go ahead and look - you see that you've got now this BL proxy folder and this is where blender is going to stick all of the proxies for all of the different clips that you're using in your video so you can see here it is here's clip 1 mp4 okay so now the last thing we need to do coming back to blender to use that proxy is up here in the preview pane I don't want to view a high-resolution original version of it I want to view the proxy so the way I'm gonna do that here I forgot how you actually access it via the buttons but what you do is you're gonna left click somewhere namely probably in the black is probably the best place to do it and then push the N key and N is gonna bring up and as in November we'll bring up some of these other options and now what I want to do here is in the proxy rendered size I'm gonna click on this drop down and I'm gonna say I don't want to view the HD version I want to view this 25% proxy that I just made so now watch as soon as I click this look at the resolution here for example maybe maybe you see right now you can read this thing that says control something gosh my handwriting is horrible but when you click on this 25% it's gonna swap in that lower resolution preview for our editing purposes so when I click this look at that the resolution got a little bit worse it's a little harder to see but now this scrubber if you click on this it's much faster much smoother and when I click on play have to deal with both of these issues here and notice now that it's actually playing at 30 frames per second as we expected so this is perfect alright so now that we've got our proxies built I think we're ready to start editing so why don't I move the scrubber back and let's just play until some section where we want to say cut the video so it's ability we have to deal with both of these issues here if we're trying to actually implement them right ok let's say this is a good spot so we say right here you can kind of see is a little bit break in the conversation let's say I want to edit the video at this point there's a couple of ways you can do this what I usually like to do is as I'm editing the video I like to drop in markers to help me understand where different areas of the video that I might be interested in are so to drop in a marker at the place where the preview bar is located at just come here to marker and click on add marker and you'll see what gets added as this little triangle here to the sequencer along with a number so the number is how many frames or the frame number at which you dropped this marker so you see at frame number 335 we went ahead and dropped a marker so now if you had had scrubbed or moved around somewhere you can quickly jump back to the same location by coming over here to marker and just saying jump to next or previous marker so if we click on jump to next marker it will bring myself exactly to this location here at frame 335 so what we might want to do now is let's cut out the entire second half of this video because I kind of only want the first so what I'm gonna do is I'm going to click on the video section right here and I'm gonna make a cut at this point so there's a couple ways you can do this one way is you can or whoops sorry the way I like to do this is I like to just press K I'm trying to remember exactly how you did that here is it strip yeah here we go cut or okay cut and hard cut are two different things but I usually just use the cut one we'll go into the details of what cut and hard cut are at a later video but for now cut is totally fine so Kay or cut right here you'll see is gonna split this now into two separate two separate video clips we probably want to do the same thing for the audio right because I want the video and the audio to go together so I'll click here on the audio go ahead and press the K for ki Orakei lo button now I've gone ahead and split these so what I want to do is you can easily delete these these this extraneous video and audio clip so to do that just click on the one you want and again I think you can just come here I usually just hit X yeah here it is delete or at the X key or I believe the delete button works too but if you click delete you'll get a confirmation and say yeah I really do want to erase a strip and but bam it's gone same thing you come here I'm just gonna push the delete button yeah there it goes same thing erased rips and it's gone it's great so we've gone ahead and cut this video okay so let's go ahead and save we've done a good bit of work let's go ahead and import that second video into the the project so if you remember the second video was this vertical video that we were that we took with an iPhone and notice it's a completely different file extension it's a dot MOV instead of an mp4 but you know blenders not gonna care I mean what's that thing it's it's not it's not honey badger don't care right it's blender don't care so if I just come in here and say mark or excuse me um ad movie and I'll go ahead and click on my MOV file and click Add to movie strip it went ahead and imported that thing no problem okay although notice that it's kind of in the wrong orientation so maybe that's a teaser for one of our future videos where we'll talk about how to do transformations on video strips if you want to say rotated or shrink it or zoom in or things like that but for now let corazon ttle it's fine this is close enough so what we can do is again let's do our little trick here I'm gonna go ahead and click on the this is the audio portion of it and I'll come over here to the left side and to visualize the waveform notice again it doesn't show up because I haven't clicked on the right tab I'll come up here to the strip tab and then I can go ahead and click on draw waveform okay so I see the waveform so let's uh let's again we'll scrub through this and again notice we have the same issue where this scrubbing is super choppy right so if I hit play again we've got the same problem we need to rebuild a proxy for this second strip that we made so again let me scoot this off to one side bring up my folder I'll come here into the BL proxy folder and let's just watch a blender make another proxy for this so just to build the proxy again remember all you got to do is click on the video file that you want to build a proxy for come here to the proxy and cache section come down here to strip proxy and timecode click on the check box make sure it's at 25 and then just click on the rebuild proxy and time code indices and then come down here and watch this green icon in the blender launcher in the taskbar fill up and you'll notice here it is it's building it building it building it and there it is so now we've got a proxy and since we already have set the renderer up here to use a proxy scene render size of 25% we should be good to go so if I go ahead and hit play on this now everything running and life is good so again let's just go ahead and try to edit this video so I'll go find a good spot here this looks like a good spot well let's let's get the dog catching the the snowball so let's cut this video so again maybe what I will do is I'll add um I guess I don't really necessarily need to add a marker here because we're gonna move things around so you don't need to add a marker in order to cut something I can just go ahead and place the scrubber at the location where you want maybe let's put it right how about right here however right here there we go and I'll click on the video I'll click on Kay on my keyboard don't get to cut it and then I will click on the audio strip and same thing I'll click on Kay on my keyboard or come here to strip and just say cut great and then we can get rid of these these extraneous sections so I'll delete those extraneous sections and then same thing let's go ahead and okay that looks like a good section to stop alright so we'll stop there and again I will cut both of these so I'll cut Kay Kay delete delete great so now we've got these two strips and uh but you'll notice there's a gap between the two here okay so to close this gap we have to move one of these strips let's move the dog strip and have it smoothly but up against the the previous lecturing strip so to move a strip it's also pretty simple all you got to do is click on the strip that you want and then come here to strip and I think it's gee I always just use G where is the is it not here well it's it's the G key I've gotten so used to the hotkey that I forgot actually how to get it to happen normally well anyway click on the strip you want to move and it more importantly click in the middle of it you'll notice if we if you zoom in on the front and the back of them there are these sort of these arrows you don't want to click on that and click it hit G that's gonna do something different that we'll cover in a different tutorial but to move this click on the strip click G as in golf and you'll see what ends up happening is now if I move my mouse I'm able to move this stripper so I'm just gonna move it and I'm gonna have it butt up and notice there's two numbers in front and behind of the strip so that's the beginning and ending frame number so you see that the previous clip clip on one ends at at frame number 334 so I want this one to start at 335 so I'm gonna move this to the side until there we go and if I click that will basically place the strip appropriately now notice it didn't move the audio clip so I could I probably should have grouped them together and done them at the same time but for the interest of practice let's just do the exact same thing I'll click on the audio click on the G key and then move it down and you'll notice that if you move it and have them overlap one of them goes red and says you can't do that so I'm gonna move it until they line up nicely here I think I want there perfect so we're I think we're getting set we're getting really close so if I now come back here and play em right trip to the other strip um why don't we do let's let's add how about a soundtrack to make this a little bit more exciting here so you can add a soundtrack to your video just like adding a movie clip you can add an audio clip so again let's just come up here to add and now instead of movie let's add a sound so here I've got this free mp3 that I got from the YouTube audio library so it should be licensed free so I should be able to include it in my video so I'm gonna go ahead and click on it again remember that we put everything in this this single folder right so here's the the the asset that I want to include in my project is this video sorry this audio file so let's go and click on this and then say add sound and let's go ahead and do our trick of visualizing the waveform so we can see where there's sound okay this looks pretty great so all we got to do now is line this up and let's go ahead and I will move this audio file by just clicking on it again clicking G as in golf and I will move this around so everything lines up nicely let's make it start at one perfect and now if we play this together we're incredibly powerful all right but but at spider-mans up with great power comes great responsibility we have to deal with both so now I've got the audio playing as well the the audio is a little loud you can easily change that by just clicking on the audio track or the audio channel coming over here to the strip section and then here in volume just type in a number lower than one I don't know how about 0.2 and then hit enter a lot of these controls in blender you can also instead of just clicking and entering a number left-click and hold and then slide the mouse to the right or the left and you'll see that this changes the the value kind of in a dynamic fashion and it's really nice that you can see the waveform updating kind of down there in the sequencer so there we go point to that seems pretty reasonable let's play this again see how it sounds its ability we have to deal with both of these issues here or try to actually implement them right okay that sounds better so at this point I think we're almost done the last thing we should probably do here is again let's come back to that section where we talked about the output and you notice that this section that is highlighted is all of the tracks that we're rendering here or all the frames that we're rendering and you'll notice that that goes beyond the end of this last clip well that's probably pretty boring because no one wants to just look at a blank screen and listen to music so let's make it stop here somewhere I don't know it doesn't have to be at the very end how about how about somewhere like here so if you move the scrubbing a section to an area that you're interested in if you look down here in the bottom screen this number is actually the frame number that you're at so again watch this and move as I move this around you can see that frame number counter change let's say I want to stop here at frame number 434 so to do that we need to come back up here to the upper right pane and say I want to end at pinched frame number 434 and hit enter and there you go you can see that the section stops so now if I play this it will automatically stop full safe feedback controllers were incredibly powerful right hey um and same thing the beginning doesn't have to start at frame number one if I wanted to start this video like I don't know right here I'll just go and look at what the frame number is it's actually frame number 97 so I'll come up here and same frame start change up to 97 and bam again you see that section of that kind of darker highlighting will change to reflect the areas of interest so at this point I think this is pretty great let's go ahead and save our our file and let me scoot blender off to one side so we can look at the output screen at the same time we're ready to basically output or render this final cut edited movie together so to do that um you come up here to render and you click on render animation or ctrl f12 so when I click on that it's gonna basically start compiling and rendering this entire scene where I've got video I've got a soundtrack I've got multiple Clips I've got all that kind of good stuff and it will only do that between frames 97 and frames 434 so let's go ahead and give it a whirl so I'm gonna click on render and click render animation and here you go you it's gonna give you this preview and you'll notice that it is a high resolution preview it's not the 25% proxy that we were talking about earlier so this is exactly what we want and again if you want to see or view progress you can look at it down here in this icon I believe if you come over here to blender you ya here you go you can also watch it count down remember we're trying to get to frame 434 you can watch the rendering process so it is outputting you're gonna see here in a second hopefully here's here's the file we're gonna wait for it to finish so it's almost there there it is it's done and now here is our final video so let me just look at the details so we can see so this last sampled video you see we get this is the name of the output that we picked right if you remember coming back to our blender settings I think I need to blow this up a little bit more right in the output we said output something called final rendered video and it does that here is final rendered video and it gives you actually then start the the frames the starting frame and the ending frame so this file right here should be the combined video so just to convince yourself of that let's just double click this and open it up in VLC or some other video editing programs and here you are here is the composite edited video all right so let's take a moment to summarize as well as make a small little cheat sheet of all the different operations that I like to do when I'm starting a new blender project so we saw that the first thing we did was we needed to set up blender for video editing and we saw that that was as easy as coming up into this upper left and just selecting file new and then changing it to video editing and then saving the star dot blend file after that we saw that we needed to go and set some project settings and that was mostly over here in this upper right panel and I'm listing here some of the operations and changes that we made that were different than the default after that we saw that once the project was set up we could start adding video and building proxies so to add the movies we saw that that was pretty darn easy you just come down and you say and movies but then to build the proxies that took a little bit more work down here in this lower right corner and after we built the proxies we also needed to change the the preview window which is up here by changing that proxy rendered size to the appropriate dimensions so that was the only small oddity and then also we looked at how to actually display the waveform on audio tracks as well finally we saw that you could do a lot of very simple basic editing operations in blender just like you can with any other video processing software you can things like add markers move Clips around cut them and then we saw that the last thing you needed to do was just render the final video using ctrl f12 and we saw most of this action now moved down to this bottom central sequencer pane so with that I think this is a pretty good comprehensive look at how to get started using blender as a video editor so I hope you enjoyed the video and if so I hope you'll also consider sticking around and maybe even subscribing surprisingly if you just scroll down a little ways and click on that subscribe button it really does help me continue making these videos and I'm looking forward to making more of these blender videos next we'll start looking at how to do things like adding picture-in-picture or Gaussian blurs or other more advanced topics in blender we'll see that it's a very full-featured video so with all that being said I hope I will catch you at one of these future discussions I'll talk to you later bye
Info
Channel: Christopher Lum
Views: 170,238
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: Blender video editor, getting started with Blender, Blender 2.80, free video editor
Id: m7c45On2eYk
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 35min 35sec (2135 seconds)
Published: Thu Nov 14 2019
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