
Adjust the audio until the voice and music harmoniously blend together without one sounding more powerful than the other. Most video editors have audio control right on the track.
If it sounds off, it needs to be adjusted regardless of how amazing your footage is! How To Fix: Pro Tip:Ĭlose your eyes and just listen to your video. Pay special attention to your final edit by focusing on the sound. Make sure the music blends in with your voice talent, or sits just below the voice. Newbie editors often have their music track overpowering their other tracks. In Camtasia, you can turn that off by right clicking and selecting “separate audio and video” then just delete or hide the audio track. If you do not need audio from the original clip, the first thing you can do is turn that off. On your timeline, there will usually be two to three audio components. To save you time and energy, here are 7 common video editing mistakes that can be corrected in post production process: 1. Don’t let mistakes intimidate you- some of the best new video editing “techniques” have come from mistakes. There are many mistakes that will be made along the way.īut a lot of mistakes can be corrected with a few simple tweaks in post-production editing.
Mysterious MS Access Printing Failure on Report Di.Creating a video can feel daunting.
Success in the Land of Windows 95 VM Creation. Long story short: If VideoPad is loading messed-up versions of your video clips, try renaming them to bypass the cached entry. It could be easily fixed by adding a check for file size or date modified. Apparently, it caches video files by file names for quick loading in other projects, storing the data in some shared database. Renaming the file fixed the problem in VideoPad. It did, with audio and all, finding the correct length. I then went into Windows Media Player to see whether it could play the file. It also was able to be loaded a lot faster than the others. This got me thinking, and I noticed that (due to OBS's naming method) the butchered file had the same name as the last one to receive butcherage. Fortunately, though, the other three clips of roughly equal length I recorded were fully intact. To my horror, the clip again had blank audio - and also blank video for the last 30 minutes (which was super weird because I only recorded for about 15). This time, I ran a better sound check before going ahead with the full recording. The last time I tried to record such things, I misconfigured my microphone, resulting in blank audio. Today, while recording the newest LP video of KeenRush's Episode Smile, I stumbled upon a really nasty - yet minor - glitch in NCH VideoPad, the editor I use to put stuff together.