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Imovie 10.1.2 export
Imovie 10.1.2 export













  1. IMOVIE 10.1.2 EXPORT MOVIE
  2. IMOVIE 10.1.2 EXPORT FULL
  3. IMOVIE 10.1.2 EXPORT FREE

In this case we’re talking about video rather than photos, of course, but it’s the same idea. Theater is iMovie’s version of Photo Stream. Here you view your media assets and work on your projects. Library and Theater: iMovie’s default view is Library. Click Create and you find these options: ‘Theater’, ‘Email’, ‘iTunes’, ‘YouTube’, ‘FaceBook’, ‘Vimeo’, ‘CNN iReport’, and ‘File’. Share: iMovie 10 gives you plenty of ways to share your work with others (though there’s no direct export to Apple’s discontinued iDVD application). IMovie offers plenty of ways to share your work.

IMOVIE 10.1.2 EXPORT MOVIE

(Any that are incompatible with iMovie are grayed out.) Alternatively, you can drag compatible media files directly into the timeline.Ĭreate: Click Create, and you can create a new movie or a new trailer-a special kind of templated iMovie project that I’ll discuss in another lesson.

IMOVIE 10.1.2 EXPORT FREE

You’re free to select more than one item. By default, the imported item is added to the event currently selected in the Libraries pane but from the pop-up menu that appears at the top of the Import window, you can select a different event or add it to a new event. You can use it to navigate to media files that you’d like to import into your project. Import: Click this button, and an import window appears.

imovie 10.1.2 export

IMovie 10 does its best to keep you from turning to menus for common commands by placing those commands in the toolbar at the top of the window.

IMOVIE 10.1.2 EXPORT FULL

Select a point in the timeline and hover your cursor over the Viewer, and play controls appear that allow you to navigate through the project using Back and Forward buttons, play or pause the project, and view it in full screen. Likewise, when you scrub through clips in the Project pane’s timeline, the Viewer displays that content. Hover your cursor over the Viewer to see play controls. And if you choose an event, you can scrub through the contents of that event in the Browser and see the results in the Viewer. Select a project, and you see the clip’s resolution and length. For example, select iPhoto Library in the Library pane followed by an event in the Browser, and in the Viewer you see that event’s main thumbnail image, its date, and the number of photos and video clips it contains. When you select a media item in the Browser pane, information about that item will appear in the Viewer. The Viewer pane appears at the top-right of the iMovie window. To navigate back, click the heading- Events, for example-that appears at the top-left of the Browser pane. All images within the item will appear in the browser. To see the contents of a selected item (an event or place, for example), double-click on it. When you do, the item’s main thumbnail image appears in the Viewer pane, which is just to the right of the browser. Click the one that will lead you most quickly to the image you want to view. But click the Events entry that appears at the top-left of the browser, and you discover ‘Faces’, ‘Places’, ‘Albums’, ‘Facebook’, ‘Flickr’, ‘Smart Albums’, and ‘Slideshows ’ entries. If you choose iPhoto Library, you find, by default, thumbnails of your iPhoto events. When you select one of these entries, items related to it appear in the Browser pane.Īs I mentioned, when you select a library item, you see some kind of preview of that item in the Browser pane. This takes the place of the many buttons that used to occupy the right side of the iMovie ’09’s toolbar and includes entries for ‘Transitions’, ‘Titles’, ‘Maps & Backgrounds’, ‘iTunes’, ‘Sound Effects’, and ‘GarageBand’. Select iPhoto Library to see thumbnail images in iMovie’s Browser pane and Viewer.Īt the bottom of the Libraries pane is the Content Library. Click the downward-pointing triangle next to the iMovie Library entry, and you see a list of individual events. Clicking iMovie Library also shows your iMovie events-this time laid out on a timeline, rather than as a thumbnail. Select All Projects, and projects you’ve created in iMovie appear as thumbnails in the Browser. (We’ll explore the Browser more thoroughly shortly.) Choose All Events, and any movie events you’ve created populate the Browser. When you select iPhoto Library, any events within iPhoto appear in the Browser pane that appears just to the top-right of the Libraries pane. At the very least you should see entries for ‘iPhoto Library’, ‘All Events’, ‘All Projects’, and ‘iMovie Library’. The top portion of this pane is filled with links to your photos, projects, and movie events. The left side of the iMovie window contains the Libraries pane.

imovie 10.1.2 export

With iMovie 10, Apple rejiggered the interface-so back we go to see where each element now lives. In our first iMovie ’09 lesson, I took you on a tour of the interface and pointed out the five panes and the central toolbar that iMovie used to do its business.















Imovie 10.1.2 export